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Introduction [PDF]

open access: yes, 2012
Judson, Pieter M., , \u2778   +1 more
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Nations and Nationalism

2016
At the heart of nationalism lies the belief that humanity is (or ought to be) divided into nations, and that nations are (or ought to be) the basis of independent sovereign states. The basic problem of nationalism is the difficulty (if not impossibility) in making political facts correspond to the national ideal. As a result, scholarship on nationalism
Jennifer Jackson-Preece, Maria Norris
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Nations and Nationalism

2019
Nations can be defined as political communities where free and equal citizens respect each other’s rights (Renan 1882). When the concept is defined in this civic manner, it comes closer to the idea of patriotism (Habermas 1996). However, a nation can also be defined as an ethnic community where its members share the same cultural traits and qualities ...
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Nations and nationalism

2012
Introduction While nations and nationalism have become the dominant mode of ascribing political culture in world politics, understanding the meaning and political importance of these terms has been a notoriously challenging task. One survey of concepts in International Relations (IR) said of the term ‘ national interest ’ that it was ‘the most ...
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Nations and Nationalism

2008
The twentieth century saw the emergence of many nation-states previously non-existent. Lithuania, Estonia, and Slovenia are just examples of what previously would have been regarded as basically loose linguistic groups or provinces ruled over by metropolitan states, such as Russia or Austro-Hungary, which are now nation-states.
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Nationalism and Nations

2017
The modern nation-state is one of the most significant and powerful of all human institutions. Many modern states have created constitutional systems and institutions that provide the justification for the exercise of power, a type of authority Max Weber called rational-legal authority.
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The Nation and Nationalism

2017
This chapter discusses the relations between Christianity and nation in three different state constructions: the unification of smaller states into a nation state, older states already with a central government, and nation states that were established by peoples breaking away from empires. It emphasizes new forms of sources for nationalism such as: the
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The American Nation, National Identity, Nationalism.

The Journal of American History, 1999
"Ever since Crevecoeur formulated his famous question, Americans have asked themselves: ""What, then, is the American, this new man?,"" and even more urgently so once it became predictable that the traditionally majoritarian position of Anglo-Americans will dissolve in a sea of multi-ethnicity.
Robert Bonner, Knud Krakau
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Nation, Nation-State, and Nationalism

2019
Abstract Max Weber published a good deal as a German nationalist. He wrote about nation and state as a social scientist. Much of his political writing promoted German interests at home and abroad. As a scientist he wrote about ethnic community, national community, and state (though rather less about nationalism and nation-state).
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