Open AccessBook
Ethnonationalism: The Quest for Understanding
Walker Connor
- 15 Nov 1993
1K
TL;DR: This article reviewed a wide range of scholarship on ethnonationalism and concluded that progress in the study of the subject has been hampered by terminological confusion, an inclination to perceive homogeneity even where heterogeneity thrives, an unwarranted tendency to seek explanation for ethnic conflict in economic differentials, and lack of historical perspective.
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Abstract: Walker Connor, perhaps the leading student of the origins and dynamics of ethnonationalism, has consistently stressed the importance of its political implications. In these essays, which have appeared over the course of the last three decades, he argues that Western scholars and policymakers have almost invariably underrated the influence of ethnonationalism and misinterpreted its passionate and nonrational qualities. Several of the essays have become classics: together they represent a rigorous and stimulating attempt to establish a secure methodological foundation for the study of a complicated phenomenon increasingly, if belatedly, recognized as the major cause of global political instability. The book opens by reviewing a wide range of scholarship on ethnonationalism. Connor examines nineteenth- and early twentieth-century debate among British scholars on the viability and desirability of the multinational state, the American "nation-building" school of thought that dominated the literture on political development in the post-World War II era, and the recent explosion of literature on ethnonationalism. In the second part of the book, he shows how progress in the study of ethnonationalism has been hampered by terminological confusion, an inclination to perceive homogeneity even where heterogeneity thrives, an unwarranted tendency to seek explanation for ethnic conflict in economic differentials, and lack of historical perspective. The book closes with a consideration of the inherent limitations of rational inquiry into the realm of group-identity.
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Citations
Nationalism and Ethnicity in the Horn of Africa
John Markakis
- 01 Jan 1999
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the role of these two closely related, and often confused, phenomena in struggles for power and argue that conflict involving nationalism and ethnicity rarely brings out the best in human nature; the reverse is the norm.
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Conceptual Debates in Ethnicity, Nationalism, and Migration
TL;DR: This paper reviewed some of the basic conceptual debates in nationalism studies under the broad and interrelated categories of ethnicity, nations and nationalism, and classified them into ethnic, national and ethnic types.
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Explaining ethnonationalism: The flaws in Western thinking
TL;DR: The first half of this article presents five related explanations of ethnonational conflict which flow from western political thought, particularly from liberalism, utilitarianism and Marxism, and the second half of the article explains that these explanations are flawed because they are rooted in a philosophical tradition which exaggerates the importance of self and class-interest and downplays the importance in people's lives as mentioned in this paper.
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Explaining Ethnicity: Primordialism vs. Instrumentalism
TL;DR: Two principal schools of thought on ethnicity are primordialism and instrumentalism as discussed by the authors, and the authors of this article aim to impartially review and scrutinise both perspectives in an attempt to arrive at a more precise and considered understanding of ethnicity.
The Intra-National Struggle to Define “US”: External Involvement as a Two-Way Street
TL;DR: This article explored the processes relating the domestic politics of nationalist mobilization to factors in the international arena, and found that skillful leaders draw in external actors to lend credibility to their own views, and explored the degree to which international factors affect whose "definitions of the situation" are successful in precipitating mobilization shifts among potential followers.
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