Why should we obey the law? Why should we willingly sacrifice life, liberty, and property to preserve our political community? Which laws are authorized? Which exceed government's authority? What kind of community merits our allegiance today? What do we owe fellow citizens, prospective immigrants, and foreign communities? A Philosophical Theory of Citizenship addresses these and other seminal questions about legal obligation, government authority, and political community. It rejects contemporary political philosophy's anti-foundational conventions by building its arguments from the ground up on an innovative, idiomatic theory of reality, ethical conduct, and the self. It employs this theory to provide scholars and students with a concise, wide-ranging defense of patriotic duty, classical liberty, and national sovereignty.
About the AuthorSteven J. Wulf is assistant professor of government at Lawrence University.
ReviewsA fresh new argument, thoughtful, subtle,and persuasive, on a concern as old as Aristotle: the nature of citizenship. -- Isaac Kramnick, Cornell University
Book InformationISBN 9780739120408
Author Steven J. WulfFormat Hardback
Page Count 162
Imprint Lexington BooksPublisher Lexington Books
Weight(grams) 363g
Dimensions(mm) 237mm * 160mm * 16mm