Line 1: |
Line 1: |
− | [[Image:lighterstill.jpg]] | + | [[Image:lighterstill.jpg]][[Image:Citizenship.jpg|right|frame]] |
| | | |
| '''Citizenship''' status often implies some responsibilities and duties under [[social contract theory]]. "Active citizenship" is the philosophy that citizens should work towards the betterment of their [[community]] through economic participation, public service, [[volunteer]] work, and other such efforts to improve life for all citizens. In this vein, [[school]]s in some countries provide citizenship [[education]]. | | '''Citizenship''' status often implies some responsibilities and duties under [[social contract theory]]. "Active citizenship" is the philosophy that citizens should work towards the betterment of their [[community]] through economic participation, public service, [[volunteer]] work, and other such efforts to improve life for all citizens. In this vein, [[school]]s in some countries provide citizenship [[education]]. |
| + | <center>For lessons on the [[topic]] of '''''Citizenship''''', follow [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Citizenship this link].</center> |
| + | ==Origins== |
| + | [ME. citesein, etc., a. Anglo-Fr. citeseyn, -zein, sithezein, altered form of OF. citeain, citehain, citein, citeen, citien, citain, later citeyen, citoyen:L. type *cvittn-um, f. cvitt-em city (cf. oppidn-um, villn-um); Romanic type civtatno, -dano, whence Pr. ciutadan, Sp. ciudadano, Pg. ciudadão; and Pr. ciptadan, It. cittadano, now cittadino, OF. cite(h)ain. The intercalation of s (z) in Anglo-Fr. citesain has not been explained: association with dainzain denizen, which was often an equivalent term, has been suggested. The suggestion that z was a mistaken reading of , meaning y, on the part of a 13th or 14th c. scribe or scribes, is in every respect untenable.] |
| + | ==Definitions== |
| + | *1. An inhabitant of a [[city]] or (often) of a town; esp. one possessing civic rights and privileges, a burgess or freeman of a city. |
| + | :b. Used also as feminine. (Cf. CITIZENESS.) |
| + | :c. A townsman, as opposed to a countryman. |
| + | :d. A civilian as distinguished from a [[soldier]]; in earlier times also distinguished from a member of the landed nobility or [[gentry]]. Johnson says ‘a man of trade, not a gentleman’. |
| + | :e. With reference to the ‘heavenly city’, the [https://www.urantia.org/cgi-bin/webglimpse/mfs/usr/local/www/data/papers?link=https://mercy.urantia.org/papers/paper52.html&file=/usr/local/www/data/papers/paper52.html&line=168#mfs New Jerusalem]. |
| + | *2. A member of a [[state]], an enfranchised inhabitant of a country, as opposed to an alien; in U.S., a [[person]], native or naturalized, who has the privilege of voting for [[public]] offices, and is entitled to full protection in the exercise of [[private]] rights. |
| | | |
| + | ==Quote== |
| + | The attainment of a high cultural [[civilization]] demands, first, the [[ideal]] type of citizen and, then, ideal and adequate social [[mechanisms]] wherewith such a citizenry may control the [[economic]] and [[political]] institutions of such an advanced [[human]] [[society]].[https://www.urantia.org/cgi-bin/webglimpse/mfs/usr/local/www/data/papers?link=https://mercy.urantia.org/papers/paper99.html&file=/usr/local/www/data/papers/paper99.html&line=62#mfs] |
| [[Category: General Reference]] | | [[Category: General Reference]] |
| + | [[Category: Political Science]] |