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Featured researches published by Barbara Arneil.


Political Theory | 2009

Disability, Self Image, and Modern Political Theory

Barbara Arneil

Charles Taylor argues that recognition begins with the politics of “self-image,” as groups represented in the past by others in ways harmful to their own identity replace negative historical self-images with positive ones of their own making. Given the centrality of “self image” to his politics of recognition, it is striking that Taylor, himself, represents disabled people in language that is both limiting and depreciating. The author argues such negative self-images are not unique to Taylor but endemic to modern political thought from John Locke to John Rawls, as the disabled (“irrational” and/or mentally disabled/ill people) are constituted in direct opposition to the rational person and/or citizen. Using contemporary social theories of disability, as articulated by disabled scholars and advocates, the author concludes that such negative self-images (and the binary of autonomy/justice and dependency/charity underpinning them) must be purged from political theory and replaced with an alternative theory of personhood/citizenship rooted in the image of interdependency.


Citizenship Studies | 2007

Global Citizenship and Empire

Barbara Arneil

Global citizenship is a concept that has been both propounded and critiqued on a number of grounds in recent scholarship, but little attention has been paid to what it might mean in an age of empire. Beginning with an analysis of American empire, the author argues that there has been an important shift in the meaning of imperial rule from what was initially a “realpolitik” version of empire in the immediate aftermath of 9/11 to what has become a more “liberal” form of imperial power since late 2003. Whereas the former sought national security in a seemingly anarchical and hostile world, the latter has sought to spread a particular kind of globalized citizenship to the world, particularly in the Middle East. The author argues that the ideological grounding for such an imperial “civilizing mission” needs to be challenged through an alternative theorization of global citizenship. Thus, the second half of the article suggests a new theory of global citizenship rooted in two basic principles: social rights (in order to address the least well off) and shared fate (in order to draw the links between the north/south and east/west). Taken together, they provide a starting point for an alternative theory of global citizenship that speaks not simply against empire but to it.


Perspectives on Politics | 2010

Gender, Diversity, and Organizational Change: The Boy Scouts vs. Girl Scouts of America

Barbara Arneil

After growing for decades, the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts both experienced a dramatic drop in membership during the 1970s. Since then their membership patterns have diverged as the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) continues to decline and the Girl Scouts of the USA (GSUSA) has reached near record numbers. These patterns raise two questions: Why the decline? And why the divergence? On the cause of decline, I argue that a younger civil rights generation, informed by a new set of post-materialist values, did not join traditional organizations like the BSA and GSUSA because their values were deemed to be outdated. The challenge for traditional organizations therefore was how to respond. Using path dependency theory, I argue that BSA and GSUSA—shaped by their own unique origins and identities—responded very differently to the critical juncture of the civil rights generation, which in turn explains the subsequent divergence in membership patterns from the 1980s onward. While the BSA rejects such changes in order to defend traditional values, the GSUSA, which established a commitment to challenging gender norms from its birth, embraces the new values and adapts virtually every aspect of its organizational identity to this new generation. As young people see themselves reflected back in the values endorsed by the GSUSA, its membership resurges, while the BSA continues to decline. I conclude by drawing out larger theoretical lessons on the meaning of change in American civil society in light of an increasingly diverse population.


Archive | 2006

Diverse Communities: The Problem with Social Capital

Barbara Arneil


Archive | 1996

John Locke and America: The Defence of English Colonialism

Barbara Arneil


Archive | 1996

John Locke and America

Barbara Arneil


Canadian Journal of Political Science | 2001

Women as Wives, Servants and Slaves: Rethinking the Public/Private Divide

Barbara Arneil


History of Political Thought | 1992

John Locke, natural law and colonialism

Barbara Arneil


Archive | 2016

Rethinking Membership and Participation in an Inclusive Democracy: Cognitive Disability, Children, Animals

Sue Donaldson; Will Kymlicka; Barbara Arneil; Nancy J. Hirschmann


Archive | 2010

Multiculturalism and the Social Sphere

Barbara Arneil; Fiona MacDonald

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Jason Tockman

University of British Columbia

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Rogers M. Smith

University of Pennsylvania

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