AcknowledgmentsPart I: Theoretical Foundations: What Is Citizenship?Chapter 1: Aristotle on Citizenship, the Common Good, and Human HappinessChapter 2: On Liberal CitizenshipChapter 3: Fragmentary Wholes: Rousseau on CitizenshipPart II: Citizenship and DemocracyChapter 4: “Is There No Virtue Among Us?”: James Madison and the Office of the American CitizenChapter 5: Virtue and Self-Government: Reflections on the Compatibility of 21st-Century American Character and the Demands of Self-GovernmentChapter 6: A Political Science of Mores: Tocqueville on Citizenship and Civic LeadershipPart III: American Citizenship and the ConstitutionChapter 7: The Origins of the Fourteenth Amendment’s Citizenship ClausesChapter 8: American Citizenship and the Constitution: The Fourteenth Amendment as Hinge and BridgeChapter 9: “So Terrible Among Men”: Montesquieu and Hamilton on the Judicial Power and National CitizenshipPart IV: American Citizenship in a Global Context: Nationalism and GlobalizationChapter 10: Nationalism and CitizenshipChapter 11: Globalization’s Nationalist Future: Migration, Citizenship and the PandemicChapter 12: Nationalism Won’t Enhance National UnityChapter 13: Can Dual Citizenship Be Equal Citizenship?Chapter 14: Legalize Undocumented Immigrants: It Will Cut Them Free of the Ball and Chain that Stalls Their IntegrationPart V: Citizenship, Identity and ImaginationChapter 15: Relations Before Transactions: Racial Inequality and Citizenship in AmericaChapter 16: Debating Citizenship: The Reverend J. H. Jackson and the Contours of Everyday Black ConservatismChapter 17: Race and the American Experiment: Jefferson, Madison, and the Problem of IntegrationChapter 18: Microaggressions and the Public GoodChapter 19: Educating Citizen Van WinklePart VI: Civic Education and Renewal: Restoring American Political InstitutionsChapter 20: Putting the US Constitution in Its Place: A Broader Agenda for Civic EducationChapter 21: The Constitution in the Civic Education of AmericansAbout the Contributors