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Tables of Contents for Citizenship
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Part I Citizen Human
Paul Barry Clarke
Before Politics
4
1
Political Beginnings
5
1
Privilege and Exclusivity
6
1
Two Types of Citizen
7
2
Inward Turn
9
2
Withdrawal and Return
11
2
Revolution and Beyond
13
7
The Reconstitution of the City as Symbol
20
7
Citizenship as a Project
27
10
Part II The Beginnings of Citizenship
The First Citizen
37
1
Solon
I Made the Crooked Straight
38
1
Solon
On Solon
39
2
Plutarch (Ploutarchos)
The Funeral Oration
41
2
Pericles
What is a City?
43
3
Aristotle
Against Timocrates
46
2
Demosthenes
The Duty of a Ruler towards the Citizens
48
2
Marcus Tullius Cicero
Remember This Day
50
2
Marcus Tullius Cicero
The World is our City
52
2
Lucius Annaeus Seneca
A Citizen of Rome
54
1
St Luke
A New Covenant
55
1
St Paul
The City is Superior to the Citizen
56
1
Epictetus
Harm to the Citizen is Harm to the State
56
5
Marcus Aurelius Antoninus
Part III The Christian Citizen
Epistle to Diognetus
61
1
Anon
The Two Cities
62
2
St Augustine
Human Law May Be Perverted
64
1
St Thomas Aquinas
Private Gain, Public Harm
65
4
Desiderius Erasmus
Part IV The Italian Revival
A Monarch is the Servant of All
69
1
Dante Aligheri
Only Citizens May Make Laws
70
3
Marsilius of Padua
To Know the City
73
1
Leonardo Bruni
In Praise of the City of Florence
74
3
Leonardo Bruni
Funeral Oration
77
6
Leonardo Bruni
Part V Citizenship in the Emerging State
Tyranny is Contrary to Nature and Reason
83
3
Thomas Starkey
Concerning the Citizen
86
3
Jean Bodin
Citizen and Subject
89
2
Thomas Hobbes
On the Duties of Citizens
91
2
Samuel Von Pufendorf
When Virtue is Absent Avarice is Present
93
3
Charles De Secondat Montesquieu
To Form Citizens is Not the Work of a Day
96
5
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Citizens are Subject Only to Themselves
101
2
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Active and Passive Citizens
103
8
Immanuel Kant
Part VI A New World Order
From the Declaration of Independence, 1776
111
3
From the Constitution of the United States of America, 1787
114
1
From the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of Citizens, 1789
115
2
And Why Should Citizens Not Aspire to Public Offices?
117
1
Anna Laetitia Aikin Barbauld
Against the Poll Tax
118
3
Maximilien Marie Isidore De Robespierre
The Restraints on Men are among Their Rights
121
2
Edmund Burke
Obedience is to Laws Not Men
123
2
Thomas Paine
Citizens Have a Duty to Keep a Watchful Eye on Government
125
1
London Corresponding Society
A Republic Can Control Factions
126
3
James Madison
A Republic is Founded on Property
129
2
John Adams
Friends and Fellow Citizens
131
3
George Washington
We are All Republicans
134
3
Thomas Jefferson
Human Emancipation
137
3
Karl Marx
Some Are More Equal Than Others
140
7
United States Supreme Court
Part VII Citizen and State
To Live Without Duties is Obscene
147
2
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Time and Duties
149
3
Joseph Mazzini
A Government of People
152
1
Abraham Lincoln
A Good American Citizen
153
4
Theodore Roosevelt
The Purpose of the State is to Serve the Citizens
157
2
Thomas Hill Green
First and Second Class Citizens
159
3
Henry Sidgwick
Becoming a Citizen
162
2
John MacCun
The State is Nothing but its Citizens
164
4
Sir Henry Jones
Critical Times
168
2
Harold J. Laski
The Typical Citizen is a Primitive
170
3
Joseph A. Schumpeter
Class and Citizenship
173
4
T.H. Marshall
What is a Good Citizen?
177
3
Gabriel A. Almond
Sidney Verba
Citizen or Person?
180
3
Alexander M. Bickel
Citizenship and Capitalism
183
2
Bryan Turner
Democratic Citizenship
185
3
Raymond Plant
A Citizen of the European Union
188
1
Maastrichttreaty
Index