Skip to main content

ANU Centre for European Studies

  • Home
  • About
  • People
    • Directors
    • Professional staff
    • Visiting Fellows
    • Past visitors
    • Associates
    • Students
      • Current PhD students
      • Past PhD students
      • Interns
  • Events
    • Event series
  • News
  • Highlights
  • Publications
    • Briefing Papers
    • Policy Notes
    • Centre Newsletters
    • Occasional Papers
    • Konrad Adenauer Lecture Papers
    • Working Papers
  • Jean Monnet activities
    • Algorithmic Futures Policy Lab
    • Culture in International Relations: Europe and the Indo-Pacific
    • EU Climate Change Agenda & External Trade and Investment
    • Implementing Climate Policies
    • Liberal Democracy in Action
    • Remembering Across Continents: European Politics of Memory from Australian Perspectives
    • EU Migration & Integration Network
    • Centre of Excellence for EU - Australia Economic Cooperation
    • Third Country Engagement with EU Trade Policy
    • EU - Australia Trade in Services
    • Energy Policy Workshop
    • Water Policy Innovation Hub
    • Europa Policy Labs
    • Understanding Geographical Indications
    • Understanding EU Trade: Stakeholder Training
    • Leadership Emerging from Migration Ethnicity Race and Gender in Australia and the EU
  • Past projects
  • Fellowships
  • Links
  • Contact us

Related Sites

  • Gifts and donations
  • Research School of Social Sciences

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeEventsExploring Analogical Citizenship For Europe - Presentation By Pablo Jiménez
Exploring analogical citizenship for Europe - Presentation by Pablo Jiménez
 
Pablo Jiménez will be delivering a presentation on 'Exploring analogical citizenship for Europe' at 10am on Thursday 10 June 2010 at the Arts Meeting Room  at the Centre for Applied Philosophy & Public Ethics.
 
Abstract
The strong cultural crisis affecting Europeans today seems to reflect, among other effects, the lack of enthusiasm with the European Union (EU) - a new polity of sorts - and the lack of cohesion among its members. One of the efforts to foster a European identity was the creation of European citizenship. But citizenship implies a people and the EU citizens already are national peoples. Should EU citizenship override national citizenship or coexist with it? Postnationalists like Habermas have suggested EU citizenship as a way to overcome nationalisms, grounding political belonging on the body of laws that members of the post-national polity generate in the public sphere. Cosmopolitan communitarianists like Bellamy think that EU citizens should form a mixed-commonwealth, with political belonging based on their nations. I will argue that the second option is more desirable and submit the analogical character of the ensuing ideas of citizenship, identity and polity. Cosmopolitan communitarianist citizenship promises to better foster the great richness of European national cultural, religious, historical, political, legal and linguistic diversity while still maintaining a certain unity to form a mixed polity. At the end I consider possible objections and challenges.

Date & time

  • Thu 10 Jun 2010, 12:00 am - 12:00 am

Location

Arts Meeting Room Haydon Allen Building

Speakers

Contact