Reorienting the Study of Citizenship in Sri Lanka

https://doi.org/10.22146/pcd.25686

Nira Wickramasinghe(1*)

(1) University of Colombo
(*) Corresponding Author

Abstract


In Sri Lankan scholarship the second component, namely 'citizenship' is virtually absent from the public discourse. The obvious reason for the elusive presence of citizenship is, as previously mentioned, the inevitable invasion in every sphere of peoples lives of issues of nationalism, subnationalism and conflict in the past thirty years owing to the Tamil insurrection in the North and East of the island. In the 1980s and 1990s while the world was embroiled in debates over cosmopolitan and multicultural citizenship Sri Lankan studies were concerned with issues of power and democracy and remained locked in outdated analytical frameworks of nation, ethnicity, and community. For historical reasons citizenship has not had in the Sri Lankan scholarly field the seminal and near obsessive presence that nation and state have occupied. Another reason may be that liberal and radical scholars - defenders of minority rights - have been suspicious of majoritarian appeals to some ideal of 'good citizenship' where minorities will eventually be expected to play by majority rules.

 

Although by the 1990s the terms had become a buzzword amongst thinkers in the North, citizenship remained in fact one of the least theorized notions in Sri Lankan studies where a generally instrumental understanding of the term that includes common defense of personal freedom, establishment of basic conditions of social justice and maintenance of civil peace prevails. In Sri Lanka, the tie between citizenship and nationhood, however, can never be wholly deconstructed or ignored. In this light, this paper will proposes future possible areas of study.


Full Text:

PDF


References

De Silva, R 2004, ‘On being, nation and citizenship in Sri Lanka: going beyond the ontological hermeneutics of the Buddhist cosmos’, in Peter F and Patricial T (eds), Critical beings, law, nation and the global subject, Ashgate, London.

Fine, B 2001, Social capital versus social theory: political economy and social science at the turn of the millennium, Routledge, New York.

Keenan, A 2007, ‘The trouble with evenhandedness. On the politics of human rights and peace advocacy in Sri Lanka’, in Non Governmental Politics, Zone Books, pp. 88-117

Kodikara, S.U 1965, Indo Ceylon relations since independence, Colombo.

Kymlicka, W 2007, Multicultural odysseys: navigating the new international politics of diversity, Oxford University Press, New York.

Kymlicka, W 2001, Politics in the vernacular: nationalism, multiculturalism and citizenship, Oxford University Press, New York.

Kymlicka, W 1995, Multicultural citizenship: a liberal theory of minority rights, Oxford University Press, New York.

Marshall, T.H 1950, Citizenship and social class and other essays, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Mouffe, C 1992, ‘Feminism, citizenship and radical democratic politics’, in J. Butler & J. Wallach-Scott (eds), Feminists theorize the political, Routledge, New York, pp.369-384.

Parekh, B 2000, Rethinking multiculturalism, Macmillan, London. Shastri, A 1999, ‘Estate Tamils, the Ceylon citizenship act of 1948 and Sri Lankan politics’, Contemporary South Asia , vol. 8, no.1, pp. 65-88

Taylor, C 1997, The politics of recognition, Broadview press, Petersborough. Tully, J 1995, Strange multiplicity: constitutionalism in an age of diversity, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Weerawardena, IDS 1952, ‘The minorities and the citizenship act’, Ceylon Historical Journal, vol. I, no. 3, pp. 242-250.

Wickramasinghe, N 2006, Sri Lanka in the modern age. A History of contested identities, London, C.Hurst.

Wickramasinghe, N 2005, ‘Politics of nostalgia. The citizen as peasant’, Delhi School of Economics Occasional Papers, New series, no 2.

Wickramasinghe, N 2000, ‘Migration and migrant communities in early twentieth century Sinhala nationalism’, in C.Bates (ed.), Community, empire and migration: South Asians in diaspora, Palgrave, London, pp. 153-184.

Wickramasinghe, N and Leelarathne, S ‘The political imaginary of the ‘peasant’ citizenship and democracy in Tissamaharamaya’, in Niraja G. D (ed.), to be published in a Volume by Routledge, New York.

Yuval-Davis, N. & Werbner, P 1999, Women, citizenship and difference, Zed Books Ltd, London.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.22146/pcd.25686

Article Metrics

Abstract views : 1553 | views : 1300

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2017 Power, Conflict and Democracy Journal

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

web
analytics View My Stats

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

       

 

 

                                © Faculty of Social and Political Sciences Gadjah Mada University Jl. Sosio-Yustisia Bulaksumur Yogyakarta 55281
                                                     Telp (0274) 563362 Ext. 150; +62 811 2515 863 - email: pcd@ugm.ac.id