1. Introduction
Jatinder Mann
Part I: Transnationalism
2. Rethinking Citizenship Through Transnational Lenses: Canada, New Zealand, and Australia
Augie Fleras
3. Respatializing Social Citizenship and Security Among Dual Citizens in the Lebanese Diaspora
Daiva Stasiulus
Part II: Evolution and trajectory of citizenship regimes in settler societies
4. Australian Citizenship in a Changing Nation and World
Brian Galligan
5. The redefinition of citizenship in Canada, 1950s-1970s
Jatinder Mann
6. Redefining Political Community After Empire: New Zealand and Non-Citizen Voting Rights
Kate McMillan
7. ‘All the Rights and Privileges of British Subjects’: Māori and Citizenship in Aotearoa New Zealand
Carwyn Jones & Craig Linkhorn
Part III: Settler-Indigenous citizenships
8. Indigenous citizenship and the historical imagination
Tim Rowse
9. The Impossibility of Citizenship Liberation for Indigenous People
Joyce Green
10. ‘A useful and self-respecting citizenship’: Māori as citizens in the quest for welfare in the modern New Zealand state
Mamari Stephens
11. Renegotiating Citizenship: Indigeneity and Superdiversity in Contemporary Aotearoa/New Zealand
Paul Spoonley
Part IV: Deep diversity and securitization
12. Australia’s Immigrants: Identity and Citizenship
Andrew Markus
13. The vulnerability of dual citizenship: from supranational subject to citizen to subject?
Kim Rubenstein
14. Building a New Citizenship Regime? Immigration and Multiculturalism in Canada
Yasmeen Abu-Laban
15. From Settler Society to Warrior Nation and Back Again
Audrey Macklin