Investigating Multiple Citizenship in International Relations: Rethinking Globalisation, Nation-States and Social Contract

Multiple citizenship was once thought to signify disloyalty to the nation-state and threaten the sovereign international system, hence considered an aberration that should be limited. However, International Relations is in the process of reconceptualising its approaches and moving away from state-ce...

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Main Author: Hyunji Kang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Indonesia 2018-07-01
Series:Global: Jurnal Politik Internasional
Subjects:
Online Access:http://global.ir.fisip.ui.ac.id/index.php/global/article/view/315
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spelling doaj-034c304189c0452e994067c11a003d522020-11-24T22:14:30ZengUniversitas IndonesiaGlobal: Jurnal Politik Internasional1411-54922579-82512018-07-01201153710.7454/global.v20i1.315189Investigating Multiple Citizenship in International Relations: Rethinking Globalisation, Nation-States and Social ContractHyunji Kang0University of IndonesiaMultiple citizenship was once thought to signify disloyalty to the nation-state and threaten the sovereign international system, hence considered an aberration that should be limited. However, International Relations is in the process of reconceptualising its approaches and moving away from state-centrism so that it may better address the challenges of a transnationalising world. Examining the concept of multiple citizenship provides an opportunity to expand IR research agendas and transnationalise IR theory. Employing a multidisciplinary literature review, this article identifies the possible ways through which investigating multiple citizenship can contribute in advancing the discipline’s theorisations. Firstly, it contends that an analytical focus on multiple citizenship enriches IR theory by re-examining concepts which have not been adequately questioned in traditional IR and enabling deterritorialisation of the sovereign nation-state, de-conflation of the nation from the state, and reconsideration of the relationship between citizens and nation-states. Secondly, multiple citizenship can serve a base for considerations about globalisation and the future of the nation-state; it can also be used to obtain glimpses into issues, which may affect larger portions of the global population in the future. This article concludes by arguing for more serious probe to the concept of multiple citizenship in IR.http://global.ir.fisip.ui.ac.id/index.php/global/article/view/315Dual citizenshiptransnationalismglobalisationnation-statessovereignty
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hyunji Kang
spellingShingle Hyunji Kang
Investigating Multiple Citizenship in International Relations: Rethinking Globalisation, Nation-States and Social Contract
Global: Jurnal Politik Internasional
Dual citizenship
transnationalism
globalisation
nation-states
sovereignty
author_facet Hyunji Kang
author_sort Hyunji Kang
title Investigating Multiple Citizenship in International Relations: Rethinking Globalisation, Nation-States and Social Contract
title_short Investigating Multiple Citizenship in International Relations: Rethinking Globalisation, Nation-States and Social Contract
title_full Investigating Multiple Citizenship in International Relations: Rethinking Globalisation, Nation-States and Social Contract
title_fullStr Investigating Multiple Citizenship in International Relations: Rethinking Globalisation, Nation-States and Social Contract
title_full_unstemmed Investigating Multiple Citizenship in International Relations: Rethinking Globalisation, Nation-States and Social Contract
title_sort investigating multiple citizenship in international relations: rethinking globalisation, nation-states and social contract
publisher Universitas Indonesia
series Global: Jurnal Politik Internasional
issn 1411-5492
2579-8251
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Multiple citizenship was once thought to signify disloyalty to the nation-state and threaten the sovereign international system, hence considered an aberration that should be limited. However, International Relations is in the process of reconceptualising its approaches and moving away from state-centrism so that it may better address the challenges of a transnationalising world. Examining the concept of multiple citizenship provides an opportunity to expand IR research agendas and transnationalise IR theory. Employing a multidisciplinary literature review, this article identifies the possible ways through which investigating multiple citizenship can contribute in advancing the discipline’s theorisations. Firstly, it contends that an analytical focus on multiple citizenship enriches IR theory by re-examining concepts which have not been adequately questioned in traditional IR and enabling deterritorialisation of the sovereign nation-state, de-conflation of the nation from the state, and reconsideration of the relationship between citizens and nation-states. Secondly, multiple citizenship can serve a base for considerations about globalisation and the future of the nation-state; it can also be used to obtain glimpses into issues, which may affect larger portions of the global population in the future. This article concludes by arguing for more serious probe to the concept of multiple citizenship in IR.
topic Dual citizenship
transnationalism
globalisation
nation-states
sovereignty
url http://global.ir.fisip.ui.ac.id/index.php/global/article/view/315
work_keys_str_mv AT hyunjikang investigatingmultiplecitizenshipininternationalrelationsrethinkingglobalisationnationstatesandsocialcontract
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