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Citizenship and the Constitution

Identifieur interne : 002D05 ( Istex/Curation ); précédent : 002D04; suivant : 002D06

Citizenship and the Constitution

Auteurs : RBID : ISTEX:D985014CAD0FD6A58287787BAD689CEC66B765E2

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Abstract

The status of “British subjects”, the relationship between the individual and the State, and the concept of “rights” and “liberties” are relevant to the current political debate about “British identity”, citizenship, “multiculturalism”, a “British Bill of Rights”, and whether there is now a need for a written constitution. This article describes the confused contemporary understanding of what is meant by “British” citizenship and analyses the parallel developments of citizenship and our constitutional arrangements. The Human Rights Act, devolution and Gordon Brown's proposed constitutional renewal are important steps in setting out the ideas and principles that bind us together as a nation. Together with a coherent definition of the rights and obligations of British citizenship, constitutional reform would achieve a stronger sense of what it means to be British today.

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DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-923X.2008.00941.x

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ISTEX:D985014CAD0FD6A58287787BAD689CEC66B765E2

Le document en format XML

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