Journal Article10.1080/17449057.2015.1101843
Jews and Non-Territorial Autonomy: Political Programmes and Historical Perspectives
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze the relatively little known (but intellectually fecund) political programmes for Jewish autonomy in Europe in the first half of the twentieth century: the non-territorial Jewish autonomy envisioned by proponents of diaspora nationalism (primarily the historian Simon Dubnow), the national-cultural autonomy proposed by the Jewish Labour Bund (elaborated mainly by Bundist theorist Vladimir Medem) and the proposals by some liberal Zionists, such as Robert Weltsch and Hans Kohn, of Brit Shalom, to create a binational state in Palestine
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Abstract: Non-territorial autonomy, in various forms, was an enormously popular idea among Central and East European Jews in the early twentieth century, until two major events, the extermination of most European Jews during the Holocaust and the creation of the State of Israel as an ethnonational state in 1948, sidelined the public debate, among Jews, on alternatives to the nation state. This article analyses the relatively little known (but intellectually fecund) political programmes for Jewish autonomy in Europe in the first half of the twentieth century: the non-territorial Jewish autonomy envisioned by proponents of diaspora nationalism (primarily the historian Simon Dubnow), the national–cultural autonomy proposed by the Jewish Labour Bund (elaborated mainly by Bundist theorist Vladimir Medem) and the proposals by some liberal Zionists, such as Robert Weltsch and Hans Kohn, of Brit Shalom, to create a binational state in Palestine. It also considers the few historical attempts to implement these ideas...
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Citations
Conclusion: Patterns of Non-Territorial Autonomy
TL;DR: The significance of non-territorial autonomy as a mechanism for the management of ethnic conflict on the basis of case studies covering the Ottoman empire and its successor states, the Habsburg monarchy, the Jewish minorities of Europe, interwar Estonia, contemporary Belgium, and two indigenous peoples, the Sami in Norway and Maori in New Zealand as mentioned in this paper.
State and nation
Wirt McCormick
- 01 Jan 1891
TL;DR: The meaning of state and nations are closely related and share some similar features or attributes, the terms are interchangeably used as discussed by the authors, however, the two terms are not the same.
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