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Citizens Of The World Us Women And Global Government Megan Threlkeld

  • SKU: BELL-51961276
Citizens Of The World Us Women And Global Government Megan Threlkeld
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Citizens Of The World Us Women And Global Government Megan Threlkeld instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 4.38 MB
Pages: 288
Author: Megan Threlkeld
ISBN: 9780812298574, 0812298578
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Citizens Of The World Us Women And Global Government Megan Threlkeld by Megan Threlkeld 9780812298574, 0812298578 instant download after payment.

In Citizens of the World, Megan Threlkeld profiles nine women who between 1900 and 1950 invoked world citizenship to demand participation in shaping the global polity and to express women's obligation to work for peace and equality.


Between 1900 and 1950, many internationalist U.S. women referred to themselves as "citizens of the world." This book argues that the phrase was not simply a rhetorical flourish; it represented a demand to participate in shaping the global polity and an expression of women's obligation to work for peace and equality. The nine women profiled here invoked world citizenship as they promoted world government—a permanent machinery to end war, whether in the form of the League of Nations, the United Nations, or a full-fledged world federation.
These women agreed neither on the best form for such a government nor on the best means to achieve it, and they had different definitions of peace and different levels of commitment to genuine equality. But they all saw themselves as part of a global effort to end war that required their participation in the international body politic. Excluded from full national citizenship, they saw in the world polity opportunities for engagement and equality as well as for peace. Claiming world citizenship empowered them on the world stage. It gave them a language with which to advocate for international cooperation.
Citizens of the World not only provides a more complete understanding of the kind of world these women envisioned and the ways in which they claimed membership in the global community. It also draws attention to the ways in which they were excluded from international institution-building and to the critiques many of them leveled at those institutions. Women's arguments for world government and their practices of world citizenship represented an alternative reaction to the crises of the first half of the twentieth century, one predicated on cooperation and equality rather than competition and force.

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