Publication | Closed Access
Whither European Citizenship?
109
Citations
19
References
2004
Year
EthnicityEuropean LawNationalismDecolonialityEuropean Legal HistoryLawEuropean Private LawEuropean Union LawSocial SciencesEuropean Community LawConstitutional ExpertsEuropean CitizenshipHuman Rights LawEuropean IssueClassical Westphalian ModelCulturePolitical PluralismPolitical ScienceSocial Justice
A claim frequently made about European Citizenship is that by decoupling ‘rights’ from ‘identity’ it challenges us to rethink the classical Westphalian model of citizenship. According to some EU scholars and constitutional experts, this beckons a new form of ‘supranational’ citizenship practice based not on emotional attachments to territory and cultural affinities (‘Eros’), but to the rights and values of a civil society – or what Habermas calls ‘constitutional patriotism’. This article uses anthropological insights to critique these arguments and to analyse the EU’s own citizenship-building policies and practices. It concludes that rights cannot be meaningfully divorced from identity and that citizenship devoid of emotion is neither feasible nor desirable. Finally, it considers the idea of ‘post-national democracy’ and what this might entail in a modern European context.
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