by Andrew Mason
Traditional understandings of citizenship are facing a
number of challenges. Ideas of cosmopolitan and environmental citizenship have
emerged in the light of concerns about global inequality and climate change,
whilst new models of multicultural citizenship have been developed in response
to the dilemmas posed by immigration and the presence of national minorities.
At the same time, more particular debates take place about the demands
citizenship places upon us in our everyday lives. Do we have a duty as citizens
to take steps to reduce the risk of needing to rely upon state benefits,
including health care? Does good citizenship require that we send our children
to the local school even when it performs poorly? Does a parent fail in his
duty as a citizen - not just as a father, say - when he is less involved in the
raising of his children than their mother? Should citizens refrain from
appealing to religious reasons in public debate? Do immigrants have a duty to
integrate? Do we have duties of citizenship to minimise the size of our
ecological footprints? This book develops a normative theory of citizenship
that brings together issues such as these under a common framework rather than
treating them in isolation in the way that often happens. It distinguishes two
different ways of thinking about citizenship both of which shed some light on
the demands that is makes upon us: according to the first approach, the demands
of citizenship are grounded exclusively in considerations of justice, whereas
according to the second, they are grounded in the good that is realised by a
political community the members of which treat each other as equals not only in
the political process but in civil society and beyond.