“…Existing work in sociology and social policy which has sought to investigate ordinary understandings of citizenship has tended to find that individuals draw upon different, and sometimes contradictory, conceptions of citizenship (e.g., Dean, 2004; Dwyer, 2002; Lister, Smith, Middleton, & Cox, 2003). At present, analysts' responses to such empirical findings tend to be either to attempt to trace a consistency between apparently contradictory statements (e.g., Dwyer, 2002) or simply to observe that ‘popular discourse is usually chaotic and often contradictory’ (Dean, 2004, p. 68). Such observations may reflect the fact that extant sociological and social policy analyses, however sophisticated their theoretical approaches, may make problematic assumptions regarding human discursive consciousness.…”