Introduction.- Chapter I MODERNIST AND POSTMODERNIST ACCOUNT ON IDENTITY .- Introduction.- 1. 1. Hermeneutic Approaches to Subjectivity.- 1.2.
The Critique of Modernist Idea of Subjectivity: Hume and Feminist Thinkers on Identity.- 1.3. Paul Ricoeur's Hermeneutics of Suspicion as a Critique of Modernist Concept of Identity.- 1.4. Poststructuralist and Postmodernist Concept of Identity.- Conclusion.
- Chapter II PHILOSOPHICAL ROOTS OF CITIZENSHIP .- Introduction.- 2.1. Aristotle's Conception of Citizenship: Citizenship as Active Participation.- 2.2. Modern Liberal Concept of Citizenship.
- 2.3. Postmodern and Postnational Concepts of Citizenship.- 2.4 . New Ethics of Citizenship: Ethics of Care.- Conclusion.- Chapter III THE CONCEPT OF EUROPEAN CITIZENSHIP .
- Introduction.- 3.1. EU Citizenship: Towards the Postmodern Concept of Citizenship?.- 3.2. EU Citizenship as a Mental Construct: Mental Maps of Keeping In and Keeping Out.- 3.
3. Poststructuralist Feminist Critique of European Law.- 3.4. The Concept of EU Citizenship within the European Public Discourse.- 3.5. Demographic Change in the European Union: A Challenge to EU Citizenship and European Identity.
- Conclusion.- Chapter IV The European Identity <.- Introduction.- 4.1. The Concept of European Identity.- 4.2.
The Four Values of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union .- 4. 3. Poststructuralist Understanding of European Identity.- 4.4. The European Identity and European Values in the Time of Crisis.- 4.
5 The EU Visa Liberalization Process for Western Balkan Countries as a Reflection of the Politics of Modernity.- Conclusion.