Citizenship in Britain and Europe: some missing links in T.H. Marshall's theory of rights

Titel: Citizenship in Britain and Europe: some missing links in T.H. Marshall's theory of rights
Verfasser:
Körperschaft:
Veröffentlicht: Bremen, 2010
Umfang: Online-Ressource, 24 S.
Format: E-Book
Sprache: Englisch
Schriftenreihe/
mehrbändiges Werk:
ZeS-Arbeitspapier ; Bd. 2/2010
Andere Ausgaben: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe: Harris, Jose. Citizenship in Britain and Europe. - Bremen : ZeS, 2010. - 39 S., Ill.
Kein Bild verfügbar
X
Bemerkung: Veröffentlichungsversion
Zusammenfassung: Abstract: "T.H. Marshall’s reputation as an historian, social theorist, and practical interpreter of ideas about citizenship and welfare rights has probably never been higher than at the present time. Whether or not T. H. Marshall was ‘right’ or ‘wrong’ in his analysis of the questions raised in Citizenship and Social Class (1949), he has come to be seen as a key figure in sparking-off and mediating far-reaching new approaches to ideas about social welfare policy, citizenship laws, and fundamental social rights. Full discussion of Marshall’s influence opens up some very large questions, going far beyond the scope of this paper. Here I want to focus on some curious historical gaps and unanswered questions in Marshalls Citizenship and Social Class - gaps that relate both to Marshall’s account of the longer-term historical past and to contemporary movements in his own times. First, in a British context, I am puzzled by his narrative of the long-term evolution of citizenship and wel-fare rights