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Circulations and the Entanglements of Citizenship Formation

Staeheli, L.A.; Marshall, D.J.; Maynard, N.

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Authors

L.A. Staeheli

D.J. Marshall

N. Maynard



Abstract

Citizenship is given form, meaning, and power through the transactions and circulations that constitute it. Our focus in this article is the ways in which circulations through networks and institutions that extend beyond nation-states are enacted and encouraged through pedagogies and practices that moor habits of citizenship in daily lives. Although there has been significant attention to those practices at national and local levels, there has been relatively little attention to the ways that floating sites of citizenship formation are entwined with, but also seem to be suspended above, other sites. There are at least three ways in which circulations both construct those sites and are entwined in citizenship formation: They are the reason that the seeming contradiction between cosmopolitanism and efforts to moor citizens to place becomes unremarkable; they enable and shape the modes of interaction that conjoin politics and emotional geographies; and they are part of the way in which a common understanding of active citizenship is accepted almost without question. We use the examples of two international conferences for young citizen-activists to illustrate our arguments regarding the circulations of ideas, norms, and practice that are central to citizenship formation.

Citation

Staeheli, L., Marshall, D., & Maynard, N. (2016). Circulations and the Entanglements of Citizenship Formation. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 106(2), 377-384. https://doi.org/10.1080/00045608.2015.1100063

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 16, 2015
Online Publication Date Jan 4, 2016
Publication Date Mar 3, 2016
Deposit Date Sep 21, 2015
Publicly Available Date Jul 4, 2017
Journal Annals of the Association of American Geographers
Print ISSN 0004-5608
Electronic ISSN 1467-8306
Publisher Association of American Geographers (AAG)
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 106
Issue 2
Pages 377-384
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/00045608.2015.1100063
Keywords Citizenship, Intimacy-geopolitics, Mobility, Youth.

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