2010
DOI: 10.1017/s1049096510000582
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Jus Tempus in the Magna Carta: The Sovereignty of Time in Modern Politics and Citizenship

Abstract: In the English constitutional tradition, subjecthood has been primarily derived from two circumstances: place of birth and time of birth. People not born in the right place and at the right time are not considered subjects. What political status they hold varies and depends largely on the political history of the territory in which they reside at the exact time of their birth. A genealogy of early modern British subjecthood reveals that law based on dates and temporal durations—what I will call collectivelyjus… Show more

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