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Reconstructing Citizenship
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30 September 1999

Provides the most comprehensive analysis of the rise of citizenship conflict in contemporary France.
Studying the politics of citizenship reforms and immigration in contemporary France, Reconstructing Citizenship reveals the influential roles played by key figures and institutions in reconstructing French citizenship. An extended political process framework is used by Feldblum to study domestic changes in citizenship policies, nationality reforms, and immigrant incorporation politics. Focused on a decade of citizenship conflicts in France, Reconstructing Citizenship provides new insight into the re-envisioning of national membership taking place not just in France, but across European politics today.
"Persons interested in modern French politics, as well as those interested in immigration, nationality and citizenship issues, will find this an extremely interesting book." — International Migration Review
"Feldblum effectively illuminates how the notions and meaning of citizenship changed during the 1980s and 1990s. By brilliantly integrating political process in her analysis, Feldblum provides a most cogent understanding of French politics of citizenship. A sharp intellectual contribution to the contested terrain of citizenship debates." — Yasemin Soysal, University of Essex
"France is a critical case of a number of countries that are trying to fit large scale immigration of ethnically and culturally different peoples into their political and cultural frameworks. The comparative study of migration politics and policies, of citizenship, and of identity is one of the fastest growing areas of social scientific inquiry. This book is spot-on in both respects as it presents considerable material in the form of a case study of the politics of policymaking on citizenship and immigration-integration as well as a case study of the evolution of national conceptions of the meaning of being French, whether one can be a hyphenated Frenchman, and what citizenship and national identity mean in a globalizing but also increasingly fragmented world." — Gary P. Freeman, The University of Texas at Austin
"This book is an excellent work in contemporary political history of France. It makes a very valuable contribution to our understanding of the debates over reform of French nationality laws and linking this reform to broader questions of French politics." — James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University
Acknowledgments
1. STUDYING CITIZENDSHIP: A POLITICAL-PROCESS APPROACH
Introduction
Citizenship Reform as a Process, Not a Product
Culturalist, Structuralist, Institutionalist, and Political-Process Analyses of Citizenship
French Citizenship Reform as a Case Study
Research Strategy and Plan of the Book
2. THE NEW IMMIGRANTS AND CITIZENSHIP
Contemporary Immigration in France
Immigrants and Citizenship Status
3. POLITICIZING CITIZENSHIP IN FRENCH IMMIGRATION POLITICS
The Transformatins of Pluralism in France
Immigrant Associations and the Right to Difference
The Pluralist Debates and the Extreme Right
The Contested National Identity
The Left, National Identity, and Citizenship
Immigrants, National Identity, and the New Citizenship
National Identity Debates, Racial Politics, and Nativism
Conclusion: From National Identity to Citizenship
4. RE-ENVISIONING THE CITIZENSHIP: THE DEBATES OVER THE NATIONALITY CODE
From National Identity to Nationality Code
The Voluntarist Arguments
Voluntarism and the Left
The Communitarian Arguments
Communitarianism and the Left
The Nativist Arguments
Nativism and the Left
The Constraints of French Ideologies
Conclusion
5. THE REFORM, THE STATE, AND THE POLITICAL PROCESS
State Constraints on a Reform
The Four Objectives of the Bureau of Nationality
Agendas, Autonomy, and Dissension Within the State
The Reform and the Political Process
Conclusion
6. RECONSTRUCTING CITIZENSHIP: THE NATIONALITY COMMISSION
The Fusion of National Identity and Pluralism
National Identity and Concerns About European Integration
Reinforcing National Identity and National Integration
Elective Conception of the Nation and a Voluntarist Citizenship
Reaffirming and Resituating the Statist Perspective
Reactions to the Commission's Report
7. WHO'S WEARING THE VEIL? ETHNIC POLITICS AND THE NEW CITIZENSHIP
Immigrants to Ethnics: Constraints on Ethnic Citizenship and Difference
Contemporary Challenges
L'Affaire du Foulard: Creating the Affair
Defining the Drama
Managing the Affair
Conclusion
8. NATIONALITY REFORM IN THE 1990S
Citizenship Reform, Membership Traditions, and the Political Process
Domestic Political Processes and Changes in Citizenship
Appendix A: State Agencies, Political Parties, Social Organizations, and Immigrant Associations at Which Interviews Were Conducted
Appendix B: Legislative Propositions to Reform the Nationality Code
Notes
Bibliography
Index