Constitutional Patriotism

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A Theory of Justice
A01=Jan-Werner Muller
Ambivalence
Author_Jan-Werner Muller
Carl Schmitt
Category=JPFN
Citizens (Spanish political party)
Citizenship
Civic nationalism
Civil disobedience
Civil religion
Civil society
Collective identity
Colonialism
Constitutional patriotism
Constitutionalism
Cosmopolitanism
Criticism
Criticism of democracy
De facto
Decolonization
Deliberation
Democracy
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
European Commission
European integration
European University Institute
Exclusion
Extremism
Federal republic
forthcoming
Freedom of speech
Government
Habermas
Institution
James Tully (philosopher)
John Rawls
Joseph Raz
Legislation
Liberal democracy
Liberalism
McCarthyism
Member state
Modernity
Moral universalism
Morality
Multiculturalism
Narrative
Nation state
National identity
Nationalism
Nationality
Nazism
Patriotism
Political culture
Political dissent
Political philosophy
Political science
Political system
Politician
Politics
Polity
Post-war
Prima facie
Public sphere
Realism (international relations)
Regime
Republicanism
Rhetoric
Social exclusion
Sovereignty
Supranational union
Treaty
Welfare state
West Germany

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691292649
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Dec 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A powerful rethinking of citizenship and democratic belonging for a global age

Constitutional Patriotism offers a bold theory of citizenship and civic allegiance for today’s culturally diverse liberal democracies. Rejecting conventional accounts of liberal nationalism and cosmopolitanism, Jan-Werner Müller argues for a form of political belonging centered on universalist norms, adapted for specific constitutional cultures. At the same time, he presents a novel approach to thinking about political belonging and the preconditions of democratic legitimacy beyond the nation-state. The book takes the development of the European Union as a case study, but its lessons apply also to the United States and other parts of the world.

Müller’s essay starts with an engaging historical account of the origins and spread of the concept of constitutional patriotism-the idea that political attachment ought to center on the norms and values of a liberal democratic constitution rather than a national culture or the “global human community.” In a more analytical part, he then proposes a critical conception of citizenship that makes room for dissent and civil disobedience while taking seriously a polity’s need for stability over time. Müller’s theory of constitutional patriotism responds to the challenges of the de facto multiculturalism of today’s states—with a number of concrete policy implications about immigration and the preconditions for citizenship clearly spelled out. And it asks what civic empowerment could mean in a globalizing world.

Jan-Werner Müller teaches politics at Princeton University. His books include What Is Populism?; Democracy Rules; Street, Palace, Square: The Architecture of Democratic Spaces; and Contesting Democracy: Political Ideas in Twentieth-Century Europe. He contributes regularly to the London Review of Books, The Guardian, and Foreign Policy.

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