These are lucid and challenging books. I take them as an invitation to think about how we lawyer citizenship. In response to The Citizen and the Alien, I consider how the two aspects of Linda Bosniaks soft on the inside, hard on the outside understanding of citizenship remain in permanent and hierarchical contact for noncitizens, thereby shaping the process of their representation. In response to Ayelet Shachars The Birthright Lottery, I look at what it would mean to use citizenship as a framework for lawyering that combats global inequality, and suggest a correlation between different dimensions of inequity and different models of citizenship.

Editor-in-Chief: Farber, Daniel A
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Most Downloaded Articles
- Rethinking Citizenship through Alienage and Birthright Privilege: Bosniak and Shachar's Critiques of Liberal Citizenship by Song, Sarah
- Making Sense of Citizenship by Bosniak, Linda
- Blurring the Lines? Maritime Joint Development and the Cooperative Management of Ocean Resources by Schofield, Clive
- Denaturalizing Citizenship: An Introduction by Volpp, Leti
- `The Reliance Interest in Contract Damages' and the Morality of Contract Law by Smith, Stephen A.
Developing Citizenship
Muneer I. Ahmad1
1Yale Law School, muneer.ahmad@yale.edu
Citation Information: Issues in Legal Scholarship. Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages –, ISSN (Online) 1539-8323, DOI: 10.2202/1539-8323.1129, October 2011
Publication History:
- Published Online:
- 2011-10-24


















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