Citizenship Not Wanted, but Received

Thomas Misco, Estevan Molina, Brian D. Schultz
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract The United States has a lengthy history of welcoming immigrants from throughout the world and ultimately naturalizing and conferring citizenship to them. Yet, a number of indigenous and people of color never consented to citizenship and many still do not wish to have it. This article explores the role of citizenship as a tool to not only appropriate, assimilate, and colonize indigenous peoples and their lands, but to also decouple citizenship and political participation. We ultimately suggest the deployment of a Structured Academic Controversy about indigenous patriotism so that students can consider negative, positive, neutral, and multifaceted perspectives on the normally assumed uncontroversial topic of U.S. citizenship and assimilative culture from the perspective of indigenous peoples.
公民身份不是想要的,而是得到的
美国有着悠久的历史,欢迎来自世界各地的移民,并最终使他们归化并授予公民身份。然而,许多土著人和有色人种从未同意获得公民身份,许多人仍然不希望获得公民身份。这篇文章探讨了公民身份作为一种工具的作用,它不仅适合、同化和殖民土著人民及其土地,而且还使公民身份与政治参与脱钩。我们最终建议对土著爱国主义进行结构化的学术争论,这样学生就可以从土著民族的角度考虑美国公民身份和同化文化这一通常被认为没有争议的话题的消极、积极、中立和多方面的观点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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