The nation-state is seen by many today as the key unit of analysis for international organization and cooperation in the modern age, but not all groups that want to make up and control their own nation-state are able to do so: historical factors, domestic politics, and international relations often prevent them from obtaining sovereign power. Groups that have tried to create a nation-state and failed to do so can be referred to as being 'frustrated.’
Frustrated Nationalism offers case studies by an international collection of scholars who describe the efforts of many of those groups to achieve sovereign status, or at least to obtain greater control over the policies that affect them, their strategies, and their outcomes.
Spis treści
1. Frustrated Nationalism in the Twenty-First Century
Gregory Mahler
Part I. Nationalism and Some Western Democratic States
2. Frustrating Nationalism: U.S. Foreign Policy and Self-Determination
David Ryan
3. A Secular Turn: The Place of Culture in Quebec’s Self-Conception
Raffaele Iacovino
4. Nation-Building within a Union State: Scotland’s Frustrated Nationalism
Christopher A. Whatley
Part II. Nationalism and Minority Groups
5. Contextual Nationhood: The Multiple Dimensions of Nationality in the Mi’kmaw People’s Nation-Building Strategies
Simone Poliandri
6. Rethinking Mexican Nationalism: Mestizaje, Indigenous Peoples, and Zapatismo
Neil Harvey and Dolores Trevizo
7. Māori Struggle for Indigenous Rights: Contesting Sovereignty in New Zealand
Toon van Meijl
Part III. Nationalism and Ethnic Survival
8. Virtual Tibet: Representation, Legitimacy, and Struggles for Democracy
Åshild Kolås and Tashi Nyima
9. Self-Determination and National Liberation in Kurdistan in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries
Joost Jongerden
10. The Biafra Separatist Movement and Resurgence of Igbo Nationalism in Nigeria
Bernard Ugochukwu Nwosu and Kenneth Omej
11. Beyond a Militia: Notes on the History and Ideology of the Huthi (Ansar Allah) Movement in Yemen
Felipe Medina Gutiérrez
Part IV. Afterword
12. Nationalism and National Identity in the Twenty-First Century
Gregory Mahler
About the Contributors
Index
O autorze
Gregory S. Mahler is Academic Dean Emeritus and Research Professor of Politics at Earlham College. He is the author or editor of many books, including
Foreign Perceptions of the United States Under Donald Trump and
Comparative Politics: Exploring Concepts and Institutions Across Nations.