The idea of citizenship is formed through a dynamic and flexible set of relationships that go beyond a sequence of formal rights and duties. It is recurring in everyday social contexts-in practices that play out in the real world, in the everyday exercises or refusals of citizenship rights, in the purposeful defiance of norms, and in the tactical evasion of duties. This book explores the troubled relationship between a state and its citizens across four different kinds of social spaces in Limassol, Cyprus. Tactical Citizenships is a testament to the tenacity and resourcefulness of citizens of unfair states in directing their relations with the government.
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Everyday Citizenship in the Republic of Cyprus
Chapter 1. Domestic Space: Mapping the Common Ground between Home and State
Chapter 2. Commercial Space: Who Wants to Be the Bad Guy in the Parea?
Chapter 3. Public Space: Weapons of the Strong?
Chapter 4. Bureaucratic Space: Patients of the State
Conclusion: Tactical Citizenships
References
Index
Theodoros Kouros is a Lecturer at the Department of Communication and Internet Studies, Cyprus University of Technology. He has conducted long-term ethnographic research on the islands of Lesbos and Samos (Greece), along the Greek-Albanian border (Epirus, Gjirokastër, and Korçë), and in Limassol (Cyprus).