CRI372H1: Regulating Citizenship

36L

The course examines selected topics in the scholarly study of citizenship, including the history of citizenship, normative theories of democratic citizenship, rights and duties of citizenship, acquisition and loss of citizenship, and related issues, such as multiple citizenship, statelessness, and the international law of citizenship. Readings come from law, history, political science, and other disciplines; and cover Canada, other western societies, and developing countries. The course comprises three basic units: the normative basis and historical evolution of citizenship, including a case study of Canada, policies governing the acquisition and loss of citizenship in Canada and elsewhere, and the parameters of citizenship and lack of citizenship in the contemporary world. Students will gain an understanding of the historical evolution of forms of political membership in both western and non-western societies, the constitutive role of citizenship in creating and maintaining individual rights, and the development and contemporary regulation of Canadian citizenship in comparative international perspective.

1.0 credit from: CRI205H1, CRI210H1, CRI225H1
CRI392H1 (Topic: Regulating Citizenship) offered in Fall 2021, CRI394H1 (Topic: Regulating Citizenship) offered in Fall 2017, 2018, and 2019
Society and its Institutions (3)