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Democratic inclusion
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21 December 2017

Rainer Bauböck is the world’s leading theorist of transnational citizenship. He opens this volume with a question that is crucial to our thinking on citizenship in the twenty-first century: who has a claim to be included in a democratic political community? Bauböck’s answer addresses the major theoretical and practical issues of the forms of citizenship and access to citizenship in different types of polity, the specification and justification of rights of non-citizen immigrants as well as non-resident citizens, and the conditions under which norms governing citizenship can legitimately vary. This argument is challenged and developed in responses by Joseph Carens, David Miller, Iseult Honohan, Will Kymlicka and Sue Donaldson, David Owen and Peter J. Spiro. In the concluding chapter, Bauböck replies to his critics.
An electronic edition of this book is freely available under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND) licence.
PHILOSOPHY / Political, Political science and theory, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Democracy, Methods, theory and philosophy of law, Social theory, Social and political philosophy, Sociology
Part I: Lead essay
1 Democratic inclusion: a pluralistic theory of democratic inclusion by Rainer Bauböck
Part II: Responses
2 Response by Joseph H. Carens
3 Response by David Miller
4 Response by Iseult Honohan
5 Response by Will Kymlicka and Sue Donaldson
6 Response by David Owen
7 Response by Peter J. Spiro
Part III: Reply
8 Reply to my critics by Rainer Bauböck
Index