Books on the topic 'Naturalised citizens'

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1

From immigrant to naturalized citizen. New York: LFB Scholarly Pub. LLC, 2006.

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2

Enos Mills: Citizen of nature. Nivot, Colo: University Press of Colorado, 1995.

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3

W, Stravers Jon, and Howell Cindy, eds. Sylvan T. Runkel: Citizen of the natural world. Elkader, IA: Turkey River Environmental Expressions, 2003.

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4

Simões, Ana. Citizen of the world: A scientific biography of the Abbé Correia da Serra. Berkeley: Institute of Governmental Studies Press, University of California, 2011.

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5

Citizen Labillardière: A naturalist's life in revolution and exploration (1755-1834). Carlton, Vic: Miegunyah Press, 2003.

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6

Office, General Accounting. Welfare reform: Public assistance benefits provided to recently naturalized citizens : report to the Honorable Elton Gallegly, House of Representatives. Washington, D.C. (P.O. Box 37050, Washington, D.C. 20013): The Office, 1999.

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7

Tanasoca, Ana. Deliberation Naturalized. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198851479.001.0001.

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Democratic theory’s deliberative turn has hit a dead end. It is unable to find a good way to scale up its small-scale, formally organized deliberative mini-publics to include the entire community. Some turn to deliberative systems for a way out, but none have found a credible way to deliberatively involve the citizenry at large. Deliberation Naturalized offers an alternative way out—one we have been using all along. The key sites of democratic deliberation are everyday political conversations among people networked across the community. Informal networked deliberation is how all citizens deliberate together, directly or indirectly. That is how public opinion emerges in civil society. Networked deliberation satisfies the classic deliberative desiderata of inclusion, equality, and reciprocity reasonably well, albeit differently than standard mini-publics. Reconceptualizing democratic deliberation in this way highlights some real threats to the networked mode of deliberative democracy, such as polarization, message repetition, and pluralistic ignorance. Deliberation Naturalized assesses the extent of each of those threats and proposes ways of protecting real existing deliberative democracy against them. By focusing on the mechanisms underpinning every democratic deliberation among citizens, Deliberation Naturalized offers a truly novel approach to deliberative democracy.
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8

Drummond, Alexander. Enos Mills: Citizen of Nature. University Press of Colorado, 2002.

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9

Gutman, David. The Politics of Armenian Migration to North America, 1885-1915. Edinburgh University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474445245.001.0001.

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This book tells the story of Armenian migration to North America in the late Ottoman period, and Istanbul’s efforts to prevent it. It shows how, much like the present, migrants in the late 19th and early 20th centuries were forced to travel through clandestine smuggling networks, frustrating the enforcement of the ban on migration. Further, migrants who attempted to return home from sojourns in North America risked debarment at the border and deportation, while the return of migrants who had naturalised as US citizens generated friction between the United States and Ottoman governments. The author sheds light on the relationship between the imperial state and its Armenian populations in the decades leading up to the Armenian genocide. He also places the Ottoman Empire squarely in the middle of global debates on migration, border control and restriction in this period, adding to our understanding of the global historical origins of contemporary immigration politics and other issues of relevance in the Middle East region, such as borders and frontiers, migrants and refugees, and ethno-religious minorities.
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10

Duyker, Edward. Citizen Labillardiere. Miegunyah Press, 2004.

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11

Merenlender, Adina, Greg De Nevers, and Deborah Stanger Edelman. California Naturalist Handbook. University of California Press, 2013.

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12

author, Edelman Deborah S., and Merenlender, Adina Maya, 1963- author, eds. The California Naturalist Handbook. University of California Press, 2013.

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13

Texas Master Naturalist Statewide Curriculum. Texas A&M University Press, 2019.

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14

Tamura, Eileen H. Growing Up American. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037788.003.0002.

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This chapter traces Kurihara's childhood in Hawaiʻi. Kurihara was born on January 1, 1895, two years after the overthrow of the Hawaiian monarchy and three years before the U.S. Congress passed a joint resolution that resulted in the occupation of the islands as an American territory. Kurihara first attended Kaiulani School in September 1903. Like his classmates, many of whom were also children of immigrants, Kurihara was a U.S. citizen because he was born in Hawaiʻi. According to the Organic Act, which created the Territory of Hawaii, all who had been citizens of the Republic of Hawaii—which meant those born or naturalized in the Hawaiian islands—were “declared to be citizens of the United States.” In race-conscious America in the early twentieth century, however, the meaning of citizenship for racial and ethnic minorities was amorphous. Thus, Kurihara and other Asian Americans were often treated as noncitizens or as “new” Americans.
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15

Tanabe, Kazuo. Kusa no ne no yasei hogo. Rengo Shuppan, 1991.

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16

Welfare reform: Public assistance benefits provided to recently naturalized citizens : report to the Honorable Elton Gallegly, House of Representatives. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1999.

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17

Welfare reform: Public assistance benefits provided to recently naturalized citizens : report to the Honorable Elton Gallegly, House of Representatives. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1999.

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18

Diary of a Citizen Scientist: Chasing Tiger Beetles and Other New Ways of Engaging the World. Oregon State University Pres, 2014.

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19

Nature's saviours: Celebrity conservationists in the television age. Routledge, 2013.

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20

Bueker, Catherine Simpson. From Immigrant to Naturalized Citizen: Political Incorporation in the United States (The New Americans: Recent Immigration and American Society) (The New ... Recent Immigration and American Society). Lfb Scholarly Pub Llc, 2006.

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21

Berger, Jason. Xenocitizens. Fordham University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9780823287758.001.0001.

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Sociality under the sign of liberalism has seemingly come to an end—or, at least, is in dire crisis. Xenocitizens returns to the antebellum United States in order to intervene in a wide field of responses to our present economic and existential precarity. In this incisive study, Berger challenges a shaken but still standing scholarly tradition based on liberal-humanist perspectives. Through the concept of xenocitizen, a synthesis of the terms “xeno,” which connotes alien or stranger, and “citizen,” which signals a naturalized subject of a state, the book uncovers realities and possibilities that have been foreclosed by dominant paradigms. Xenocitizens glimpses how antebellum writers formulated, in response to varying forms of oppression and crisis, startlingly unique ontological and social models for thinking about personhood and sociality as well as unfamiliar ways to exist and to leverage change. Today, the old liberal-national model of citizen is not only problematic, but also tactically anachronistic. And yet, standard liberal assumptions that undergird the fading realities of humanist and democratic traditions often linger within emerging scholarly work that seeks to move past them. Innovatively reorienting our thinking about traditional nineteenth-century figures such as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Margaret Fuller, and Henry David Thoreau as well as formative writers such as Harriet Beecher Stowe, William Wells Brown, and Martin Delany, Xenocitizens offers us a new nineteenth century—pushing our imaginative and critical thinking toward new terrain.
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22

Williams, Jay, ed. The Oxford Handbook of Jack London. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199315178.001.0001.

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Robert Scholes and Clifford Wulfman define modernism and modernity this way: “Modernity is a social condition. Modernism was a response to that condition.” Modernity “is an urban condition” “reached in certain parts of the world in the late nineteenth century … a mass phenomenon” characterized by the rise of technology, print culture, and material consumption. Jack London, who is routinely categorized as a naturalist and realist, can also be called a modernist. The word modern appears often in the pages of this handbook, and though it is not new to call London a modernist, the breadth of scholarship in this present volume gives the categorization new meaning. This isn’t to deny London’s status as a realist/naturalist but only a way to recognize he was much more than that. London called his era the Machine Age and created his role of political artist to respond to it. Thus the other emphasis in the handbook is on the intersection of his politics and his art. London was concerned with instigation and shock. He wasn’t a propagandist, he was a troublemaker. In both fiction and nonfiction—a binary he did not recognize—he exposed the fallacies of capitalist society. As both a nationally recognized public figure and a citizen of the world, he chose to instruct his audience in novels, short stories, essays, speeches, and newspaper reports. This handbook ultimately emphasizes the artist Jack London bringing change to the world.
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