Political Science, asked by harry0, 1 year ago

Examine the Marxist view of citizenship​

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Answered by Anonymous
20
Marxist view of citizenship would express that there is no point for the people to be the citizen of a country when their basic needs are not fulfilled. There is no particular reason of why people are not able to experience the job of real and true citizenship and the presence of different classes in the society.
Answered by aejazahmad112
3

Answer:

Explanation:

Citizenship denotes the the link between a person and a state or an association of states. It is normally synonymous with the term nationality although the latter term is sometimes understood to have ethnic connotations. Possession of citizenship is normally associated with the right to work and live in a country and to participate in political life. A person who does not have citizenship in any state is said to be stateless.

Nationality is often used as a synonym for citizenship- notably in international law- although the term is sometimes understood as denoting persons membership of a nation.

For Marx, citizenship was an abstraction that did not relate to the real material conditions of social life.

The actual individual man must take the abstract citizen back into himself and, as an individual man in his empirical life, in him in his individual work and individual relationships, become a species-being; man must recognize his own forces as social forces, organize them and thus no longer separate social forces from himself in the form of political forces. Only when this has been achieved will human emancipation be completed.(Marx, 1844)

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