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Book No. – 001 (Political Science)
Book Name – An Introduction to Political Theory (OP Gauba)
What’s Inside the Chapter? (After Subscription)
1. NATURE OF CITIZENSHIP
1.1. WHAT IS CITIZENSHIP?
1.2. HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT
2. COMPONENTS OF CITIZENSHIP: CIVIL, POLITICAL AND SOCIAL RIGHTS
3. THEORIES OF CITIZENSHIP
3.1. LIBERAL THEORY OF CITIZENSHIP
3.2. LIBERTARIAN THEORY OF CITIZENSHIP
3.3. COMMUNITARIAN THEORY OF CITIZENSHIP
3.4. MARXIST THEORY OF CITIZENSHIP
3.5. PLURALIST THEORY OF CITIZENSHIP
4. NATURE OF DEMOCRATIC CITIZENSHIP
4.1. CONCLUSION
5. CRITIQUES OF CITIZENSHIP
5.1. THE FEMINIST CRITIQUE
5.2. THE SUBALTERN CRITIQUE
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LANGUAGE
Concept of Citizenship
Chapter – 14

Table of Contents
NATURE OF CITIZENSHIP
WHAT IS CITIZENSHIP?
- Citizenship refers to the status of an individual as a full and responsible member of a political community.
- A citizen is someone who owes allegiance to the state and, in return, receives protection from the state.
- Citizenship involves fulfilling duties and obligations towards the state, which grants the individual civil, political, and social rights.
- It signifies a two-way relationship between the individual and the state.
- A subject is typically subservient to the state, where the right to rule is reserved for a privileged class, whereas citizens constitute the state.
- Citizenship arises from a community where the right to rule is determined by a prescribed procedure reflecting the will of the general body of its members.
- The procedure for ascertaining the will of the people ensures that no one is discriminated against on grounds of race, religion, gender, place of birth, etc.
- T.H. Marshall in his Citizenship and Social Class (1950) noted that citizenship implies full membership of a community, with individuals being equal regarding their rights and duties.
- Marshall argued that different societies assign different rights and duties to the status of citizenship, and there is no universal principle determining the necessary rights and duties.
- Some groups may feel unsatisfied with their existing rights and may be regarded as citizens in a formal sense but not in a substantive sense, as some rights are denied to them in practice.
- These groups may engage in social movements to restore their rights, combining conventional political participation (e.g., voting, lobbying) with unconventional activities (e.g., protests, sit-ins, demonstrations).
- Examples of such movements include the abolitionist movement, civil rights movements in America, working-class movements in Europe, and adivasi and dalit movements in India.
- The original concept of citizenship primarily focused on the sense of duty, with the issue of rights being secondary.
- In contemporary society, citizenship is mainly concerned with the rights of the individual, with duties accepted only as necessary for maintaining those rights.