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Nationalism & Its Varieties

Nationalism & Its Varieties. Definitions of Nationalism. Ernest Gellner – Nationalism is the belief that the political and the national units should be congruent

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Nationalism & Its Varieties

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  1. Nationalism & Its Varieties

  2. Definitions of Nationalism • Ernest Gellner – Nationalism is the belief that the political and the national units should be congruent • Michael Hechter- “Nationalism is collective action designed to render the boundaries of the nation congruent with those of its governance unit” 

  3. Types of Nationalism: State-Building Nationalism • “Nationalism that attempts to assimilate or incorporate culturally distinctive territories into a given state. It is the result of conscious efforts by rulers to make a multicultural population culturally homogenous.” (Hechter)

  4. Why does state-building nationalism occur? • Geopolitical security • models of other strong national states • Need to create loyal citizens • Need for state legitimation • efficient way to extract resources • produces more mobile work and military force

  5. Class Exercise: the (newly independent) Republic of California

  6. How do states promote nation-hood? • public education • the military • promotion of new images, symbols, and ideals through the media and public imagery • physical unification and linking of territory (i.e. through new roads) • establishment and maintenance of official language(s) • suppression of other sub-national cultures

  7. More ways states promote nation-ness • myth making - creation of past shared history/re-writing of history so as to support idea of the nation • glorification of “national” heroes • creation of national currency • promotion of certain kinds of dress • creation of a common literature

  8. National Dress: Participant in the Glasgow Highland Games

  9. Building Nations: Linking territory- the steam train in India and building roads in Britain

  10. Building Nations: National heroes and national symbols Britain: Shakespeare U.S.: Statue of Liberty

  11. The symbols of the nation: Brazilian football

  12. Nation-building through the military: soldiers in the Israeli Defense Forces, left; U.S. soldiers on parade, below

  13. Peripheral nationalism • “Occurs when a culturally distinctive territory” (or people) “resists incorporation into an expanding state, or attempts to secede and set up its own government.” (Hechter) • Another (better) definition: peripheral nationalism occurs when a state-less but culturally distinctive people seek to establish autonomy or self-rule in the name of their “nation”.

  14. Examples of Peripheral Nationalisms: Kurds, Quebecois, Welsh, Basques Kurdish new year celebration.

  15. Why does peripheral nationalism occur? • Imposition of direct rule (Hechter) • Competition between local and central elites • Economic and political discrimination? (sometimes but not always; insufficient cause!)

  16. Irredentist nationalism • Nationalism that seeks to extend the existing boundaries of a state by incorporating territories of an adjacent state occupied principally by co-nationals • Examples: Sudeten Germans (WWII); Serbia under Milosevic calling for integration of all Serb-inhabited areas of former Yugoslavia into a greater Serbia (1990s)

  17. Unification nationalism • Merger of a politically divided but culturally similar territory or territories into one state. • Example: Italy, 19th century

  18. Ethnic and Nationalist Conflict: How do they differ (if at all)?

  19. Tajiks, Turkmen, Croats, Baluchis, Chinese, Tamils, Kurds, Turks, Palestinians • Since the end of World War II, 16.5 million people have died in internal conflicts, compared with 3.3 million in interstate wars. There have been about 122 civil wars since 1945, compared with 25 conventional wars. Many are between different ethnic groups. Youths in Kabul, Afghanistan, sift through rubble.

  20. Aborigines, Quebecois, Basques, Roma, Catalans, Abkhazians, Chechens • There are currently about 250 active ethnopolitical movements using various forms of protest and rebellion. • Nationalist conflict occurs in all regions of the world • Serious conflicts, 1995-98: • 16 Europe • 10 Middle East • 31 Asia • 31 Africa • 7 Latin America

  21. Myths of nationalist conflict (#1): • MYTH: “Nationalist conflict occurs because of ancient tribal or ethnic hatreds.” (primordialism) • NO. Nationalist conflicts nearly always occur because of economic and political policies pursued by modern-day states. • In other words, so-called “nationalist conflict” is rarely a conflict over ethnicity, and much more a conflict about politics. Former Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic. Photo: BBC.

  22. What are some of the practices that might create nationalist grievances? • Centralization (end of indirect rule) • “Ethnocide” • Creation of an “official” language • Banning of certain forms of cultural expression (language, music, dress) • Preferential employment opportunities • Preferential political opportunities for majority population

  23. Myths of Nationalist Conflict (#2) MYTH: “There is more nationalist and ethnic conflict today than in any other time, and the number of such conflicts keeps increasing.” NO. The rate of nationalist conflict rose steadily from the 1950s to the early 1990s and has since been dropping. Source: Minorities at Risk Project

  24. Source: Minorities at Risk Project

  25. Myths of nationalist conflict (#3): • MYTH: “Nationalist conflict usually occurs between two or more different social groups or ethnic communities.” • NO. Most nationalist conflicts occur between a minority group (or PART OF A MINORITY group, and a state (and its forces). A Russian tank in Chechnya.

  26. Modes of nationalist conflict • Conventional politics • Nonviolent protest and direct action • Rebellion • 70 ethnic groups have waged armed conflicts for autonomy or independence since the 1950s (not including liberation movements of former European colonies)

  27. Note: the most common form of nationalist conflict is NOT violence • Of 161 groups pursuing self-determination in 1998-2000, only about 41 (a quarter) used violence. The rest used conventional politics and nonviolent protest. Kurdish-rights activist Osman Baydemir on the campaign trial in Diyarbakir, Turkey, March 2004. Photo: NF Watts

  28. Resolving nationalist conflict • State acknowledgement of collective rights and provision of institutional means for pursuing interests • Federalism (Hechter) • independence • Only 5 new states emerged from ethnic conflict in the last 40 years (East Timor, Slovenia, Croatia, Eritrea, Bangladesh) Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka.

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