he concept of citizenship that achieved full legal form and force
in mid-nineteenth-century America had English roots in the sense
that it was the product of a theoretical and legal development that
extended over three hundred years. This prize-winning volume
describes and explains the process by which the cirumstances of
life in the New World transformed the quasi-medieval ideas of
seventeenth-century English jurists about subjectship, community,
sovereignty, and allegiance into a wholly new doctrine of
"volitional allegiance."
The central British idea was that subjectship involved a personal
relationship with the king, a relationship based upon the laws of
nature and hence perpetual and immutable. The conceptual analogue
of the subject-king relationship was the natural bond between
parent and child.
Across the Atlantic divergent ideas were taking hold. Colonial
societies adopted naturalization policies that were suited to
practical needs, regardless of doctrinal consistency. Americans
continued to value their status as subjects and to affirm their
allegiance to the king, but they also moved toward a new
understanding of the ties that bind individuals to the community.
English judges of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries assumed
that the essential purpose of naturalization was to make the alien
legally the same as a native, that is, to make his allegiance
natural, personal, and perpetual. In the colonies this reasoning
was being reversed. Americans took the model of naturalization as
their starting point for defining all political allegiance as the
result of a legal contract resting on consent.
This as yet barely articulated difference between the American and
English definition of citizenship was formulated with precision in
the course of the American Revolution. Amidst the conflict and
confusion of that time Americans sought to define principles of
membership that adequately encompassed their ideals of individual
liberty and community security. The idea that all obligation rested
on individual volition and consent shaped their response to the
claims of Parliament and king, legitimized their withdrawal from
the British empire, controlled their reaction to the loyalists, and
underwrote their creation of independent governments.
This new concept of citizenship left many questions unanswered,
however. The newly emergent principles clashed with deep-seated
prejudices, including the traditional exclusion of Indians and
Negroes from membership in the sovereign community. It was only the
triumph of the Union in the Civil War that allowed Congress to
affirm the quality of native and naturalized citizens, to state
unequivocally the primacy of the national over state citizenship,
to write black citizenship into the Constitution, and to recognize
the volitional character of, the status of citizen by formally
adopting the principle of expatriation.-->