Citizenship - its concepts, rights and duties

Contributed by:
Steve
This booklet covers valuable knowledge about citizenship. It tells about the concepts of citizenship, their rights, and duties which covers a deeply rich emotional content.
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Citizenship-Rights and Duties
Excerpts from “CITIZENSHIP-RIGHTS AND
DUTIES” by JUSTICE E.S.VENKATARAMIAH, JUDGE,
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA, (Justice R.K.Tankha
Memorial Lecture, 1988 delivered under the
auspices of the Central India Law Institute,
THE CONCEPT OF CITIZENSHIP
In essence, citizenship is a bond. Man, when he
comes into this world, is born with a physical bond.
This is towards his parents. Though biological in origin,
it has a deeply rich emotional content. As he grows, he
comes to form a number of other bonds. Some of these
are extra-legal and purely emotional, such as the bond
of friendship. A few of them have both legal and
emotional aspects, such as the bond of marriage. A few
of them, again, have only legal aspects, such as the
bond arising out of contract. But the one bond that
arises on birth and flowing from the law, may govern the
life of an individual throughout his or her existence is
the bond of citizenship. This aspect does not become
prominent in our static life - a proposition which might
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be true of many other legal links. It is only when a
problem of some difficulty arises or a controversy of
some magnitude emerges, that the strength or
weakness of the bond and the manner in which it is
binding, becomes crucial.
The concept of citizenship has fundamental links
with the development of political thought throughout
the centuries. The present day word ‘citizen’ itself is
derived from the French root word ‘citoyen’. As at
present understood, it has two meanings. According to
the first meaning, it is linked with a particular city, for
example, as when one speaks of ‘citizen of Paris’. In the
second meaning, it carries connection with the State or
the nation and indicates a certain type of relationship
with a particular nation. It is for this reason that the
word ‘nationality’ is often used in other countries to
denote the political and legal link that exists between a
particular State and those who owe permanent
allegiance to it. However, the one disadvantage of the
expression ‘nationality’ is that it has a negative and
disjunctive quality about itself. It indicates a
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sociological affinity. It emphasizes the demarcating
barrier between one nation and another and makes
subordinate the philosophical link between a State and
its own nationals. The modern nation States owe their
origin to the idea of nationality like, the French, the
Germans or the Dutch. The idea that a person who is
not a member of a nation can also be a citizen is
overlooked. In contrast, the word ‘citizen’ makes it
possible to hint at the fact that within a geographical
territory organized as a political entity, there could be a
number of persons between whom and the political
organisation there is affinity. Citizenship in this case
may be acquired by birth or by naturalization. The
present day United States of America is an ideal
illustration to explain this concept. People who
originally belonged to different nationalities have now
become citizens of the United States of America.
Citizenship in this case is an affinity that makes them
care for the political organisation and also makes that
organisation care for them. It is thus a cementing tie,
positive in its content and constructive in its approach.
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The fact that citizens may, if necessary, take up arms
for the State to which they belong and may be called
upon to do so is incidental to this relationship. What is
of primary value is that in their daily life and conduct,
they owe obligations to the State.
It is to the Greeks that we owe the basic concept of
citizenship. The Greek States did not have large
territories. Mostly, they were small city States, ruled by
monarchy or, at times, by some other form of
Government. But the fact was that persons
permanently residing within the geographical territories
or units owed an obligation to the State and enjoyed
certain rights and they brought into the forefront the
intimate relationship between the State and these
residents. Thus was born the concept of citizen. The
fact that the States were also cities might have
something to do with the origin of the word. But once
the concept was evolved, it lost the purely local colour
and came to occupy an important place in the history of
philosophical thought.
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Athens was a model city State. The period
between 460 B.C. and 430 B.C. during which Pericles
ruled was perhaps its best period. Those years have
been ideally called as the classical Greek period during
which period the Greek culture blossomed. It gave a
stimulus to the entire European world in all
departments of life and art – literature, philosophy, art,
sculpture, drama, science and medicine. This was
followed by the era of Aristotle and Alexander.
W.H.Auden writes:
“There could be no stronger proof of the
riches and depth of Greek culture than its
powers of appeal to every kind of personality.
It has been said that every one is born either
a Platonist or an Aristotelian; but it means to
me that there are more contrasted and
significant divisions than this, between for
instances, the lovers of Ionia and lovers of
Sparta, between those who are devoted to
both Plato and Aristotle and those who
prefer Hippocrates and Thucydides to
either.”
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Proceeding further Auden said:
“Had Greek civilization never existed, we
might fear God and deal justly with our
neighbours, we might practice arts and even
have learned how to devise fairly simple
machines, but we would have never become
fully conscious, which is to say that we
would never have become, for better or
worse, fully human.”
This is the tribute paid by a modern European to
the ancient Greek civilization which was dependent on
the practice of good citizenship and observance of
equality in political life.
This Greeks themselves were great thinkers.
Unlike the modern intellectuals, they did not divide life
into segments. Nor did they divide knowledge into
compartments. They regarded life as one integral
whole, to be lived to the full. It was a rich life, not
devoid of pleasures of the senses, but, at the same time,
not wanting in the refinements of civilisation. The body,
the mind and the soul went together. The family, the
society and the State supplemented each other. With
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this approach towards life, it was inevitable that
knowledge was also regarded as integral. It was to be
an instrument for living the full life, enriched with
subtle thinking and occasional philosophical
excursions. It was in this climate that Greek drama,
history, poetry, rhetoric and other intellectual
achievements were born and took shape. This naturally
made it possible for the Greeks to accept the thinking of
philosophers who offered deep insights into reality and
a co-ordinated approach. The famous trilogy of Greek
philosophers-Socrates, Plato and Aristotle-wonderfully
enriched Greek thinking. Each of them viewed life as a
whole and took all knowledge as his province. Socrates
stood for free thinking. Plato’s thinking which probably
will survive for a few more centuries, has a stamp of
originality and depth, of which the finer nuances have
not yet been grasped, even though a hundred
generations have passed. Aristotle, the last of these
three great philosophers, tried to systematize, collect
and co-ordinate knowledge. He had the advantage of
the abstract doctrines of Plato and could make concrete
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many of the abstractions. Covering almost all branches
of knowledge, Aristotle did not leave out politics and
ethics. In Book III of Politics Aristotle tries to give some
idea of the organisation of the State. A portion of the
discussion is devoted to the citizen. Here, he mentions
the essential attributes of a citizen as one who takes
part in the process of judgment and in the deliberations
of the Assembly. Because of the peculiar nature of the
city States in Greece, Aristotle’s emphasis on these two
functions is understandable. Even though the citizen in
the modern State has no direct role to play in law-
making or in the making of political decisions by
representative assemblies, Aristotle’s formulation about
the citizen has not lost its significance. It serves to
highlight the basic postulate of a democratic State,
namely, that every citizen has some part to play in the
governance of the country. Similarly, Aristotle’s
mention of the role of the citizen in the administration
of justice, though it may now appear to be only of
historical value, serves the important function of
reminding us that the administration of justice is an
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essential function of the State. It also reminds us that
even if a court of law may be primarily concerned with
disputes between the individuals who are parties to the
dispute, every citizen is interested in the process of
justice. Academic though it may appear, this aspect
has been known to assume considerable practical
importance from time to time, in modern legal doctrines
and decisions. Not unoften, legal controversies arise as
to how far the principle of open trial can be properly
departed from. Legal controversies inevitably arise as to
the considerations on which exceptions, if any, could be
made to the principle that the proceedings of a court
shall be open to the public (including the press) and the
reporting of judicial proceedings is to be regarded as a
matter, not only of legal right, but also of relevance as a
means of education and information for the citizens.
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