1st Edition

Citizenship East and West

Edited By Andre Liebich, Daniel Warner, Jasna Dragovic Copyright 1995
    236 Pages
    by Routledge

    236 Pages
    by Routledge

    First Published in 1995. The outcome of the political transition in Eastern Europe depends not only on the politics pursued but on the understanding of politics in the countries involved. A key aspect of such understanding is the notion of 'citizenship', an ancient term of striking contemporary relevance not only in Eastern Europe but in the West as well. What then are the dynamics of citizenship in Europe's new democracies and how do emerging solutions to the question of citizenship there respond to the concerns that the issue of citizenship has raised and continues to raise elsewhere? These questions prompted the project which has led to this volume. Conceived in 1991, it focussed on Poland, Hungary and, what was then Czecho-Slovakia, as countries already grappling with the issue of post-communist citizenship.

    Problems: Two Concepts of Citizenship, Citizenship in its International Dimension; Citizenship and Identity: A Double Reading of the Identity Crisis Poland: Citizenship in Post-Communist Poland: Civil Society or Das Volk? Hungary: Citizenship in Hungary, from a Legislative Viewpoint, Questions of Czech Citizenship, Slovakia After the Split: Dilemmas of the New Citizenship, Discussion 5 Perspectives

    Biography

    Andre Liebich Professor of the history of international relations at the Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva. Daniel Warner Research Fellow and assistant director of the International Training Course in International Security and Arms Control at the Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva.Jasna Dragovic Teaching Assistant at the Graduate Institute of International Studies and lecturer at The Colgate University Geneva Programme.