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12 Geo. J.L. & Pub. Pol'y 187 (2014)
Treason, Expatriation and So-Called Americans: Recovering the Role of Allegiance in Citizenship

handle is hein.journals/geojlap12 and id is 195 raw text is: Treason, Expatriation and 'So-Called' Americans:
Recovering the Role of Allegiance in Citizenship
ASHWINI VASANTHAKUMAR*
ABSTRACT
Allegiance is an essential element of citizenship, featuring in its statutory
definition and invoked in its rituals. Most scholars have dismissed allegiance as
a vestige from a feudal past. Certainly, the last several decades have witnessed
a revolution in citizenship: access to citizenship has been liberalized, and
citizenship is now widely recognized as a 'right to have rights' that states are
loath to infringe upon. Allegiance would seem to have no place in this context.
In this Article, I seek to recover the role of allegiance in citizenship and
demonstrate its continued legal and normative relevance. I develop two illustra-
tive conceptions of allegiance by analogy to political obligation and civic
virtue. I then undertake a close reading of select Supreme Court decisions in
treason and statutory expatriation-contexts in which the betrayal or transfer of
allegiance is of moment. I draw upon these decisions to further illuminate the
concept of allegiance as well as to identify its normative implications for
citizenship. Through inchoate allusions to allegiance, states recently have
deprived individuals of their citizenship and undermined the protections that
status once afforded. Clarity about allegiance is necessary to avoid abuse; this
Article begins a preliminary investigation.
INTRODUCTION           .......................................... 188
I. ALLEGIANCE AND CITIZENSHIP IN CONTEMPORARY POLITICAL AND
ACADEMIC DEBATES          ..................................  193
II. Two CONCEPTIONS OF ALLEGIANCE    ....................... 196
A. Feudal Origins: Permanent and Temporary Allegiance ....  196
B. Allegiance as Political Obligation  ...................  197
C. Allegiance as Civic Virtue ..........................   199
D. Feudal, Liberal and Republican Allegiance .............  200
III. TREASON           .......................................... 201
A. Cramer, Haupt, and Kawakita   ....................... 204
B. 'Owing Allegiance': Status or Sentiment ...............  206
* Term Fellow in Political Theory, University College, Oxford; A.B. (Harvard); J.D. (Yale), DPhil
(Oxon). The author is very grateful to Daniel Markovits for generous comments and supervision on an
earlier version of this paper. @ 2014, Ashwini Vasanthakumar.

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