User talk:2605:8D80:620:553C:FCE3:DF8E:EBC6:D6C5

1948, the aftermath of World War II and the Holocaust and growing sentiments towards legitimizing marginalized peoples (e.g., pre-industrialized peoples found in the jungles of Brazil and Borneo). Couple this with growing awareness of our impact on the environment, and there is the rising feeling that citizen rights may extend to include the right to dignity and self-determination. If national citizenship does not foster these new rights, then global citizenship may seem more accessible.

Global citizenship advocates may confer specific rights and obligations of human beings trapped in conflicts, those incarcerated as part of ethnic cleansing, and pre-industrialized tribes newly discovered by scientists living in the depths of dense jungle {{cite news |author1=Alan C. Cairns |author2=John C. Courtney |author3=Peter MacKinnon |author4=Hans J. Michelmann |author5=David E. Smith |title=Citizenship, Diversity, and Pluralism: Canadian and Comparative Perspectives

1948, the aftermath of World War II and the Holocaust and growing sentiments towards legitimizing marginalized peoples (e.g., pre-industrialized peoples found in the jungles of Brazil and Borneo). Couple this with growing awareness of our impact on the environment, and there is the rising feeling that citizen rights may extend to include the right to dignity and self-determination. If national citizenship does not foster these new rights, then global citizenship may seem more accessible.

Global citizenship advocates may confer specific rights and obligations of human beings trapped in conflicts, those incarcerated as part of ethnic cleansing, and pre-industrialized tribes newly discovered by scientists living in the depths of dense jungle {{cite news |author1=Alan C. Cairns |author2=John C. Courtney |author3=Peter MacKinnon |author4=Hans J. Michelmann |author5=David E. Smith |title=Citizenship, Diversity, and Pluralism: Canadian and Comparative Perspectives