Beyond Citizenship: American
Identity After Globalization
by Peter J. Spiro
American identity has always been capacious as a
concept but narrow in its application. Citizenship has mostly been about being
here, either through birth or residence. The territorial premises for
citizenship have worked to resolve the peculiar challenges of American
identity. But globalization is detaching identity from location. What used to
define American was rooted in American space. Now one can be anywhere and be an
American, politically or culturally. Against that backdrop, it becomes
difficult to draw the boundaries of human community in a meaningful way.
Longstanding notions of democratic citizenship are becoming obsolete, even as
we cling to them. Beyond Citizenship charts the trajectory of American
citizenship and shows how American identity is unsustainable in the face of
globalization.
Peter J. Spiro
describes how citizenship law once reflected and shaped the American national
character. Spiro explores the histories of birthright citizenship,
naturalization, dual citizenship, and how those legal regimes helped reinforce
an otherwise fragile national identity. But on a shifting global landscape,
citizenship status has become increasingly divorced from any sense of actual
community on the ground. As the bonds of citizenship dissipate, membership in
the nation-state becomes less meaningful. The rights and obligations
distinctive to citizenship are now trivial. Naturalization requirements have
been relaxed, dual citizenship embraced, and territorial birthright citizenship
entrenched--developments that are all irreversible. Loyalties, meanwhile, are
moving to transnational communities defined in many different ways: by race,
ethnicity, gender, religion, age, and sexual orientation. These communities,
Spiro boldly argues, are replacing bonds that once connected people to the
nation-state, with profound implications for the future of governance.
Learned,
incisive, and sweeping in scope, Beyond Citizenship offers a provocative look
at how globalization is changing the very definition of who we are and where we
belong.