Contents: Introduction: what do we talk about when we talk about citizenship rights?, Jo Shaw and Igor Å tiks; Part I What Are Citizenship Rights (and Duties)?: Propositions on citizenship, Étienne Balibar; Citizenship and social class, 40 years on, Tom Bottomore; Rights, relationality, and membership: rethinking the making and meaning of citizenship, Margaret R. Somers; Freedom from, in and through the state: T.H. Marshall’s trinity of rights revisited, Zygmunt Bauman; Two meanings of global citizenship: modern and diverse, James Tully. Part II Different Status, Different Rights: Citizens, residents, and aliens in a changing world: political membership in the global era, Seyla Benhabib; Multicultural states and intercultural citizens, Will Kymlicka; Temporary migrants, partial citizenship and hypermigration, Rainer Bauböck; Transformation of citizenship: status, rights, identity, Christian Joppke. Part III Citizenship Rights and Transnational Challenges: EU citizenship and political rights in an evolving European Union, Jo Shaw; Evaluating Union citizenship: belonging, rights and participation within the EU, Richard Bellamy; Transnational citizenship and the democratic state: modes of membership and voting rights, David Owen; Citizenship and identity: living in diasporas in post-war Europe?, Yasemin Nuhoglu Soysal. Part IV Struggles Over Citizenship Rights: Citizenship in flux: the figure of the activist citizen, Engin F. Isin; Mutations in citizenship, Aihwa Ong; The repositioning of citizenship: emergent subjects and spaces for politics, Saskia Sassen; Feminism, capitalism and the cunning of history, Nancy Fraser; Democratizing citizenship: some advantages of a basic income, Carole Pateman; Constructing sexual citizenship: theorizing sexual rights, Diane Richardson; The right to the city, David Harvey; Name index.