Introduction Seyla Benhabib, Ian Shapiro and Danilo Petranovich Part I. Emergence and Limits of National Political Identities: 1. From affiliation to affinity: citizenship in the transition from empire to the nation-state Faruk Birtek 2. Transnationalizing the public sphere: on the legitimacy and efficacy of public opinion in a postwestphalian world Nancy Fraser 3. 'Being there': place, territory, and identity Charles Maier 4. Political boundaries in a multilevel democracy Rainer Bauboeck Part II. Multiple Identities in Practice: The European Example: 5. Building European institutions: beyond strong ties and weak commitments Veit Bader 6. Soft borders and transnational citizens Julie Mostov 7. Transnational nationalism: redefining nation and territory Riva Kastoryano Part III. Decoupling Citizenship from Identity: 8. Binding problems, boundary problems: the trouble with 'democratic citizenship' Clarissa Hayward 9. Immigrant political integration and ethnic civic communities in Amsterdam Jean Tillie and Boris Slijper 10. Nonterritorial boundaries of citizenship Melissa Williams, 11. Against birthright privilege: re-defining citizenship as property Ayelet Shachar Part IV. Identity and Historical Injustice: 12. Social solidarity as a problem for cosmopolitan democracy Craig Calhoun 13. The continuing significance of ethnocultural identity Jorge Valadez 14. Amnesty or impunity? A preliminary critique of the report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Mahmood Mamdani 15. Law's races Rogers Smith.
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