10,150 results on '"nation building"'
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2. The Disappearance of the Msane Chiefdom, 1820s to 1890s.
- Author
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Nxumalo, Siyabonga and Mokoatsi, Thapelo
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ASSET management accounts , *NINETEENTH century , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *NATION building , *POLITICAL systems - Abstract
This articles examines the Msane chieftaincy, a small polity located in the vicinity of the White and Black Mfolozi Rivers in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. This article makes two contributions. One, it presents a coherent narrative of the history of the Msane chiefdom in south-eastern Africa. It does so by looking at how it was challenged, then disintegrated and migrated, and finally assimilated itself into other groups over the course of the nineteenth century. Two, it contributes to the ongoing conversation about the historiography of groups in southern Africa, especially as regards the question of how to reconstruct precolonial (and colonial) histories that were dismissed in the accounts about Zulu nation-building accounts and swept under the carpet in written accounts in the mid- and late nineteenth century. The article discusses developments in the broad area south of Delagoa Bay and how these led to the rise of the paramount kingdoms such as the Ndwandwe under Zwide, Mthethwa under the Dingiswayo and the Zulu Kingdom. Amongst the chiefdoms that were affected by these developments was the Msane chiefdom. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The Arabic language, nationalism, and nation-building in the Mashriq and the Maghrib: the case of Iraq and Morocco.
- Author
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Leijnse, Tom
- Subjects
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ARABIC language , *MODERNIZATION (Social science) , *NATION building , *STANDARD language , *NATIONALISM - Abstract
This paper discusses the role of Standard Arabic in nationalism and nation-building in the Mashriq and the Maghrib through two case studies, Iraq in the 1920s and 1930s and Morocco in the three decades after its independence in 1956. It explores the history and political significance of the modernisation and standardisation of the Arabic language and analyses Standard Arabic’s role in nationalism and nation-building in the Mashriq and the Maghrib in general and in Iraq and Morocco in particular. It argues that while both the Mashriq and the Maghrib saw a process of Arabisation, this process was a
revival of Arabic in Iraq and the Mashriq and areclamation of the language in Morocco and the Maghrib, and that while the Arabic language was used in the independence struggle and nation-building in both the Mashriq and the Maghrib, it was used as a symbol of Arab nationalism in Iraq and the Mashriq but as a symbol of Islam in Morocco and the Maghrib. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
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4. In Search of Identity: The Armenian Orphans' Magazine Tun.
- Author
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Gzoyan, Edita and Margaryan, Narine
- Subjects
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WORLD War I , *CHILDREN'S literature , *TURKS , *STUDENT publications , *OTTOMAN Empire , *ORPHANS , *ARMENIAN genocide, 1915-1923 - Abstract
During the Armenian Genocide, the Ottoman Empire's Young Turk government forcibly transferred and assimilated thousands of Armenian children into Turkish society. After the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in the First World War, Armenian and international bodies and individuals began to liberate the transferred children. However, they encountered resistance to child identification from both Turkish authorities and some of the children themselves. This study examines the efforts to bring back those child-survivors, many of whom, after being rescued, found it difficult to accept their Armenian identities following their traumatic ordeal. To analyse in what ways the liberated child-survivors were educated, this study investigates Tun magazine, prepared by the orphans of the Jbeil orphanage, and presents its history. Tun is a unique example of a student press that was guided by teachers, with the aim of reinforcing Armenianness in the students and returning them to their nation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
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5. Militarized state-building interventions and the survival of fragile states.
- Author
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Matush, Kelly and Lake, David A
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FAILED states , *INTERVENTION (International law) , *NATION building , *ARGUMENT - Abstract
Militarized state-building interventions (MSIs) must fulfill two often conflicting goals. At the time of withdrawal the intervenor must leave in place a state able to survive on its own and govern its territory. States only intervene in other states, however, when they aspire to change the policy of the target in ways they prefer. In attempting to balance these objectives, the intervenor 'pulls' policy in its preferred direction by supporting a less popular leader at the cost of leaving behind a state that is no more likely to survive over time than its peers. We test our theory and find evidence for this trade-off by examining all MSIs by great powers and IOs in failed states from 1956 to 2006. Consistent with the theory, we find that MSIs do not on average have any significant effect on state survival. We also find that MSIs that move the target state's policy closer to that of the external power have a negative effect on survival, but interventions that do not result in a change in policy do not. This argument and finding temper the optimism of much of the contemporary literature on international interventions. Potential intervenors face a stark trade-off. If they draw the policy of the failed state towards their own preferences, then that state will be more likely to fail again in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
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6. Settler colonial bordering and post-pandemic futures: disrupting the nation state in Aotearoa/New Zealand.
- Author
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McCormack, Fiona, Isaacs, Bronwyn, Kurian, Priya, Paekau, Rolande, Divakalala, Cayathri, and Bennett, Sharayne
- Subjects
- *
IMPERIALISM , *NATION-state , *COVID-19 pandemic , *NATION building - Abstract
In Aotearoa/New Zealand, the relative safety offered by border regime closures during Covid-19 promised to ease uncertainty surrounding perilous futures, yet it did so by extending nation building into more intimate areas of life, exacerbating existing lines of discrimination. While justified in terms of crisis management, state expressions of citizen care during the pandemic were largely modelled in terms of a particular conflation of nature, society and economy peculiar to settler colonialism. Using bordering practices during the pandemic as a point of departure, this essay draws on scholarship on borders to interrogate settler colonialism in Aotearoa. This allows for four innovations: First, it situates Covid-19 as structure rather than event, one which accentuated historical patterns of nation-making. Second, it underscores continuities in Indigenous relations of ownership, belonging, social reproduction, kinship ethics and environmental engagements. Third, it suggests alliances between migrants, non-white and colonized peoples; those for whom borders do not remain at the periphery, but rather penetrate deep into the informal spaces of the everyday. And fourth, it recalibrates resistances as expressions of sociality aimed at reclassifying nature, economy and society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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7. STATE BUILDING IN CRISIS MANAGEMENT: Reflections on Statecraft from the Shanghai Lockdown.
- Author
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Wang, Ying, Wu, Fulong, and Zhang, Fangzhu
- Subjects
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CRISIS management , *CONSTRUCTION management , *DISCOURSE analysis , *NEIGHBORHOODS , *NATION building - Abstract
The exceptional measures to combat the Covid‐19 pandemic have brought great potential for reconfiguring urban governance. To examine such potential, this article presents how the pandemic crisis was managed in Chinese neighbourhoods. Following a statecraft approach and using Shanghai as a case, we show how a citywide lockdown played out on the ground as a joint product of state apparatus and citizens. Drawing on discourse analysis of interviews, policy documents, and news reports, we probe into Shanghai's contextualized neighbourhood pandemic responses, particularly by emerging neighbourhood voluntary practices in crisis management. We examine how these practices were tactically incorporated into the state's overall responses to the pandemic through co‐production, co‐option and mobilization. Instead of co‐governance, we argue that the grassroots state orchestrates and steers community participation and volunteerism to reinforce grassroots statecraft and consolidate its role in (post‐) pandemic neighbourhood governance. Through exceptional crisis management measures, the state penetrates everyday life. This process has facilitated local state‐building in urban neighbourhoods, thereby manifesting, perpetuating, and expanding state‐centred governance trends that were established well before the onset of Covid. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
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8. State infrastructure and neighborhood well-being in urbanizing China.
- Author
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Chen, Juan, Liu, Mengyu, Chang, Charles, and Wang, Yuhua
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URBANIZATION , *INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *NATION building , *RESIDENTS - Abstract
Urbanization involves a process of state building. As manifest in its infrastructure, the state shapes its interactions with citizens. In this study, we link fine-grained geo-referenced points-of-interest (POI) data of government agencies with the 2018 Urbanization and Quality of Life Survey conducted in 40 localities experiencing rural-urban transition, and investigate how the presence of state infrastructure is associated with neighborhood well-being in China during a period of rapid urbanization. Our findings confirm that urbanization contributes to the expansion of local state: there is more evidence of state infrastructure per capita in newly urbanized areas than in potential sites of urbanization. Moreover, the association between state infrastructure and neighborhood well-being varies based on the type of government institution and the type of neighborhood. The presence of administrative infrastructure is positively associated with neighborhood satisfaction, which is likely due to residents' easier access to public services. In contrast, there is a negative association between coercive infrastructure and neighborhood satisfaction, but less so for urban neighborhoods than rural villages. The research provides nationwide evidence that the process of urbanization increases the state reach as well as its influence on local governance, but the effects of this influence vary considerably. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
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9. The Catalan Digital Republic: Between Nation Branding and Nation Building.
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Jiménez, Aitor and Garai-Artetxe, Estitxu
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PLACE marketing , *CRITICAL discourse analysis , *NATION building , *REBRANDING (Marketing) , *CRITICAL analysis - Abstract
This article empirically studies the Catalan Digital Republic, that is the set of practises, narratives, institutions, and infrastructures mobilised by a stateless nation to reposition itself in the international arena. The article has a two-sided objective. First, to analyse how nation branding and nation building strategies intersect with digital technologies and technopolitical narratives. Second, to examine how stateless nations are making use of such technologies and strategies in order to find their way in the international arena. To satisfy these objectives we have empirically studied the case of Catalonia, a stateless nation which in the last years has developed an ambitious technopolitical strategy rebranding itself as the southern European technological hub. To do so we have relied on a triangular methodological strategy combining (1) critical discourse analysis; (2) in-depth interviews with high-profile actors coming from the political, academic, and civil society landscape, and (3) a thorough documentary analysis. The first part of the article explores the concept of digital nation and its relationship with the notion of nation branding. In the second part of the text, we present the methodology and the objectives. We continue the paper by outlining the results of the interviewing process and the critical analysis of the findings. The article concludes with a critical recapitulation of the research results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Spanish Fake Sovereignty: From Privatising the Nation-State to Becoming a Digital Colony.
- Author
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Cancela, Ekaitz and Goikoetxea, Jule
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MASS surveillance , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *LAW enforcement , *SOVEREIGNTY , *NATION building - Abstract
Giving policies pompous names, such as 'Digital Spain 2025', 'National Artificial Intelligence Strategy' (ENIA) or 'Spain 2050', the Spanish government wants to roll out a new sovereign power deployed outwards and integrated into the global digital, financial and military sphere. The article argues that this process, which requires handing over legal, social, financial, and economic powers to private corporations, has transformed the country into an incipient 'digital colony,' a territory for data mining and the surveillance of society situated on the periphery of the capitalist world economy. On the way to becoming a digital colony, the privatisation of nation-building and popular sovereignty has involved discriminating against minority nations and executing repressive law enforcement policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
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11. Shared Ideals, But Persistent Barriers: Improving Tribal‐University Research Engagement to Strengthen Native Nation Building and Rural Development☆.
- Author
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Herkshan, Laticia J., Hart‐Fredeluces, Georgia M., Redd, Elizabeth A., Tso, TJ, and Burnham, Morey
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BUSINESS partnerships , *NATION building , *COLLEGE environment , *HISTORY of colonies , *RURAL development - Abstract
Research partnerships between Tribal Nations and rural colleges and universities can support rural development and strengthen Tribal Nation building through reclamation of economic, political, cultural, and social affairs. However, Tribal Nation–University relationships have received little attention in rural sociology. While scholars identify best practices for research engagement in light of colonial harms, the ideal visions that Tribally and university‐affiliated people have for research partnerships and the barriers to achieving those ideals are poorly understood. Without identifying these visions and barriers, we risk making wrong assumptions about each party's needs and cannot implement appropriate policies. Semi‐structured interviews with Tribally‐affiliated (n = 20) and university‐affiliated (n = 20) people in rural southeastern Idaho suggest, contrary to literature on best practices for collaborative research, that participants in both groups viewed what we term "Tribally‐responsive research engagement" as ideal, though few projects met this goal. Tribally‐responsive research directly addressed Tribal priorities but did not necessarily involve close collaboration. The University's failure to acknowledge past or colonial harms, university‐affiliated researchers' historicization of those harms, and negative Native student experiences reinforced distrust, limiting desired research engagement. In sum, Tribally‐responsive research engagement could strengthen Native Nation building, but requires universities to acknowledge harms, create more welcoming campus environments, and prioritize Tribal benefits in research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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12. Shared Ideals, But Persistent Barriers: Improving Tribal‐University Research Engagement to Strengthen Native Nation Building and Rural Development☆.
- Author
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Herkshan, Laticia J., Hart‐Fredeluces, Georgia M., Redd, Elizabeth A., Tso, TJ, and Burnham, Morey
- Subjects
BUSINESS partnerships ,NATION building ,COLLEGE environment ,HISTORY of colonies ,RURAL development - Abstract
Research partnerships between Tribal Nations and rural colleges and universities can support rural development and strengthen Tribal Nation building through reclamation of economic, political, cultural, and social affairs. However, Tribal Nation–University relationships have received little attention in rural sociology. While scholars identify best practices for research engagement in light of colonial harms, the ideal visions that Tribally and university‐affiliated people have for research partnerships and the barriers to achieving those ideals are poorly understood. Without identifying these visions and barriers, we risk making wrong assumptions about each party's needs and cannot implement appropriate policies. Semi‐structured interviews with Tribally‐affiliated (n = 20) and university‐affiliated (n = 20) people in rural southeastern Idaho suggest, contrary to literature on best practices for collaborative research, that participants in both groups viewed what we term "Tribally‐responsive research engagement" as ideal, though few projects met this goal. Tribally‐responsive research directly addressed Tribal priorities but did not necessarily involve close collaboration. The University's failure to acknowledge past or colonial harms, university‐affiliated researchers' historicization of those harms, and negative Native student experiences reinforced distrust, limiting desired research engagement. In sum, Tribally‐responsive research engagement could strengthen Native Nation building, but requires universities to acknowledge harms, create more welcoming campus environments, and prioritize Tribal benefits in research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The Surprising Survival of Constitutionalism in the Caudillo Republic of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, 1836–1845.
- Author
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Jockyman Roithmann, André
- Subjects
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POLITICAL philosophy , *REVOLUTIONS , *CONSTITUTIONALISM , *NATION building , *CONSTITUTIONS - Abstract
The caudillo strongman remains emblematic of Latin American authoritarianism, but scholarship has seldom reflected on the semantic shifts that this concept suffered over time and its implications for the history of political thought. Numerous political experiments have been marginalized from historical and state-building narratives as the irrelevant work of caudillos , such as the short-lived Rio Grandense Republic in southern Brazil (1836–45). By explaining the Rio Grandense caudillos ' engagement with constitutionalism, this article argues that ' caudillo ' can be a useful category of analysis if historically contextualized. The article thus reconsiders the history of political thought and state-building in Latin America and beyond in the age of revolutions, suggesting the serious need to scrutinize 'failed' states and revolutions. This argument is pursued in three steps. First, the article describes shifting understandings and usages of ' caudillo ' in nineteenth-century Brazil and neighbouring River Plate states. Second, it analyses the Rio Grandense Republic's 1842–3 constituent assembly and the novel electoral procedures it employed. Third, it examines the never-promulgated constitutional draft produced by its assemblymen. This constitutional draft is then compared to contemporary River Plate and Brazilian constitutions and its rejection is explained through the assemblymen's divergent understandings of constitutionalism and democracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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14. Reframing China Studies: Insights from the Margins and Global Intersections of China's Borderlands.
- Author
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TIANLONG YOU
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NATION building , *BORDERLANDS - Published
- 2024
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15. When intellectuals educate: history and geography in the educational project for Chinese workers in France during World War One, 1916–1918.
- Author
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Ronen, Yotam
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INTELLECTUAL life , *INTELLECTUALS , *NATION building , *CURRICULUM , *MODERN history - Abstract
Between 1916 and 1918, a group of Chinese intellectuals opened a school in Paris for Chinese workers who came to Europe in aid of the Allied cause. One of them, Cai Yuanpei, created a textbook based on lectures he gave at the school, which included chapters on moral and intellectual topics. This article focuses on two of these chapters – History and Geography – and situates them within the context of Chinese modern history, curricular and pedagogical debates in mainland China, and the history of textbook publication at the time. In doing so, I argue that Cai Yuanpei utilised these chapters to instil critical thinking skills among workers in a pedagogical move that, while consistent with contemporary discussions on the goals of education, was nevertheless unique in the context of other contemporary approaches to education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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16. National identification: A psychoanalytic understanding of the role of renaming of streets and cities in India: National identification: K. Chandrashekar.
- Author
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Chandrashekar, Karuna
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NATIONAL character , *CITIES & towns , *NATION building , *NATIONALISM , *DESIRE - Abstract
This paper is an engagement with the problem of national identification and attempts to explain why it is so persistent. Beginning with Freud's formulations around identification with respect to the mass mind and the moving to Lacan, the paper attempts to address questions around the perseverance of national identity. From both a Freudian and Lacanian understanding, identification is an ambivalent process that lasts through a subject's life. It is the desire for recognition from the Other (in this case the nation) all the while circling around the subject's own experience of lack. Bolstering this lack is the enjoyment that the Other promises the subject. Using the concepts of the ego-ideal and the ideal ego along with the partial encounters with jouissance, the paper attempts to chart the ways in which identification is encouraged within the Indian nation state and how the contradictory process within it makes national identity difficult to question. The paper takes as its case the renaming of cities and streets in India, under the aegis of the current Indian government. I argue the new names, and the justifications offered for the change, signify the changes occurring in the symbolic order of the nation. These changes offer a "new" iteration of the nation state, where older desires around nation building proliferate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. French names bestowed by the Baudin expedition along the coasts of Australia: A snapshot of French national spirit during Napoleonic times.
- Author
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Bréelle, Dany
- Subjects
- *
GEOGRAPHIC names , *MILITARY officers , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *EUROPEAN history , *SCIENTIFIC expeditions ,AUSTRALIAN history - Abstract
The coasts of Australia are bestowed with place names (toponyms) that offer great cultural insights into the Australian history and its European connections. This paper focusses on the 598 place names set up by the authors of the narratives and atlases of the French voyage of discovery captained by Nicolas Baudin who undertook the surveying and exploration of parts of the South and West coasts of New Holland, and of the east and north coasts of Van Diemen's Land between 1801 and 1803. These names have been gathered into a database where they have been categorised, for example, according to the endeavour of personalities (scientific, military, administrative among others) or members of the expedition. The article shows that the French toponyms mirror the building up after the turmoils of the French Revolution of a new national narrative which gives pride of place to the men of science, cultural figures, and military officers dear to the French emperor, Napoléon I, and whose work and actions were portrayed as great examples for the nation. This retroactive reading of the French nomenclature discloses an Australian early nineteenth century French background with around half the names still recognised today. • Place names bestowed along the Australian coast mirror the successive or consecutive episodes of Australian history. • The Australian place names attributed by the Baudin expedition outlines a national narrative developed during the Napoleonic period. • These place names reflect a period of 'nation building' when France was reinventing itself after the turmoils of the Revolution. • The French narrative behind the names' selection remains poorly understood, hampering their appreciation in Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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18. The founding ground of Turkism‐Turanism in the Early Republican Period: Atsiz Mecmua.
- Author
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Bölükbaşı, Yusuf Ziya and Bilici, İlhan
- Subjects
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NATION building , *DISCOURSE analysis , *NATIONALISM , *MILITARISM , *COMMUNISM - Abstract
This study focuses on the division and conflict during the formative phase of Turkish nationalism in the Early Republican Period. Turkish nationalism, the founding ideology of Türkiye, was oriented towards identity and state building, and it developed an ethno‐secular vision. In contrast, Turkism‐Turanism nationalism, emerging from civilian circles, adopted a critical stance towards the official ideology and the prevailing understanding of ideology during that period, as evidenced by Atsız Mecmua. Using discourse analysis, this study examines prominent themes in Atsız Mecmua, such as anthropological Turkishness, Turanism, militarism, and a holistic approach to history. Conversely, communism in its ideological sense and identities other than Turkish were depicted as the other. Atsız Mecmua attempted to foster a new conception of nationalism to challenge Kemalist nationalism, seeking to forge Turkish unity through militarism and a fascist state model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The "veins and arteries of the country" Imagined and actual exclusion from railway connectivity in Bulgaria, 1878–1908.
- Author
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Fuhrmann, Malte
- Subjects
- *
STATE banks , *CULTURAL capital , *POLITICAL parties , *INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *JOINT use of railroad facilities - Abstract
The Bulgarian Principality, established in 1878, witnessed serious contentions over railway accessibility. The central planning state, through its de facto practices of catering to local interests, polarised regions contending against one another. It also witnessed strife between rich and poor articulated in class-based party politics as well as intra-elite struggles between traditional and new elites, fought out in the sphere of cultural capital. Claims to rail accessibility and its gains were expressed in social Darwinian, ethnic, nationalist, economist and socialist discourses. By contrast, the factual division of the railway network into state-run and privately operated services evoked a sense of unity. The Orient Railways served as Enemy Within due to its multinational ownership and profit-oriented policy, first under Maurice de Hirsch's control and later the Deutsche Bank's. This "negative integration" served to gloss over the many social, ethnic, ideological and regional fault lines running through the country which the central state had not managed to bridge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. South Africa at 30: What Lessons for Covenantal Pluralism from a Laboratory of Ubuntu and Nation Building?
- Author
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Rasool, Ebrahim
- Subjects
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PLURALISM , *NATION building , *DEMOCRACY , *THEOLOGY , *POPULISM - Abstract
South Africa's 30 years of post-apartheid democracy are replete with lessons in constructing a paradigm of covenantal pluralism out of the conduct of struggle against the injustice of apartheid, the management of the transition to democracy, and the imagination of a constitutional governance based on the finest values. In every seminal moment on this path there was a fluidity between the political, the societal, and the religious, which became the foundations first, of reconciliation and then of co-existence of historical antagonists. Such counter-instinctive behavior was germane to the African philosophy of human interdependence—Ubuntu—which was inscribed into the post-apartheid constitutional order as the glue for a fragmented society, and an antidote to populism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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21. Beyond Greed: Why Armed Groups Tax.
- Author
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Bandula-Irwin, Tanya, Gallien, Max, Jackson, Ashley, van den Boogaard, Vanessa, and Weigand, Florian
- Subjects
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INSTITUTION building , *TAXATION , *NATION building , *AVARICE , *IDEOLOGY - Abstract
Based on a review of the diverse practices of how armed groups tax, we highlight that a full account of why armed groups tax needs to go beyond revenue motivations, to also engage with explanations related to ideology, legitimacy, institution building, legibility and control of populations, and the performance of public authority. This article builds on two distinct literatures, on armed groups and on taxation, to provide the first systematic exploration of the motivations of armed group taxation. We problematize common approaches toward armed group taxation and state-building, and outline key questions of a new research agenda. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Pad Thai: the Thai-ization of Chinese food and the Thai nationalism project by the Phibunsongkhram government.
- Author
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Yao, Yao, Yang, Baoyun, and Wang, Xinxin
- Subjects
- *
THAI cooking , *NATIONAL character , *CHINESE cooking , *GOVERNMENT policy , *NATION building - Abstract
Pad Thai, an innovation of Chinese kway teow through Thai-ization that became an iconic national dish of Thailand, played a significant role in shaping national identity and constructing the country's national image. This study explored the relationship between nationalist policies and the localization of kway teow during the Phibunsongkhram government (1938-1944), which contributed to the popularity of kway teow in Thailand's lower class in terms of both production and consumption. The examination of government policies and recipes revealed that Thais infused their emotions and the sense of national identity into the production and consumption of kway teow, thereby enhancing the bond between individuals and the nation and laying a more solid base for the implementation of nationalist policies. The innovation of Pad Thai was one such nationalist policy that was disseminated top-down by the Phibunsongkhram government, making it a national food of Thailand by highlighting its Thai characteristics and including it in its National Nutrition Project. However, Pad Thai was not purely a national Thai dish; rather, it was one that existed in Thais' imagination. In revealing the nature of national cuisine and its importance in nation-building, this study's findings contribute to the significant role of localizing Chinese food in Thai nation-building. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Why don't we have a novel of our own?": The Anatomy of a Romanian Literary Complex.
- Author
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Terian, Andrei
- Subjects
ROMANIAN literature ,LITERARY criticism ,LITERARY form ,NATION building ,POETRY (Literary form) - Abstract
This article addresses and disproves one of the most long-standing clichés of Romanian literary criticism, namely the underdevelopment of the early novel, especially in relation to poetry. It discusses the inferiority complex and the illusion of exceptionalism that went hand in hand with this impressionistic claim about the distribution of literary genres, by looking at several critical interventions from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Then, it provides a quantitative overview of the actual situation of the early Romanian novel compared to the poetry volumes published in the same period, concluding that the myth of novelistic underdevelopment was a politically useful fiction in an age of nation-building. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Can history be used to build the nation? An analysis of the idea of a compulsory school history curriculum in post-apartheid South Africa.
- Author
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Chimbunde, Pfuurai and Moreeng, Boitumelo Benjamin
- Subjects
HISTORY education ,COMPULSORY education ,CURRICULUM ,SOCIAL cohesion ,NATION building - Abstract
Despite the critical role of education in peacebuilding, few studies in South Africa have interrogated the role of the school history curriculum on nation-building, leaving a critical gap in our understanding of the impact of a wrongly designed, developed, and implemented history curriculum. This conceptual paper, informed by the sociological foundations of education, responds to one question underpinning this study: What opportunities and threats are there for making school history compulsory in a country composed of diverse histories? Using the case of South Africa, the paper deploys document analysis to explore the risks and possibilities for making a school history curriculum compulsory. The findings replicate that making school history compulsory can be useful for nation-building. The study also argues that school history has two faces: rather than promoting nationalism and social cohesion it can also be a wedge that divides and fragments the society. Considering these findings, the study argues that the curriculum is a product of people and recommends that the school history curriculum in any country must be a selection from the history of all people. Significantly, this study extends and enriches the yet small number of studies that debate making school history compulsory for nation-building. The paper contributes practical insights into how the school curriculum can be designed, developed, and implemented for the good of the whole nation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Civil Society in Providing the Development of Democracy in the Countries of the Eurasian Economic Union.
- Author
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Serikovich, Akhmetov Arman and Nikolaevich, Zhamuldinov Victor
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL economic integration ,CIVIL society ,EMPLOYEE participation in management ,NATION building ,DEMOCRACY - Abstract
This study aims to explore the influence of civil society on the level of democracy in the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) and propose mechanisms to enhance civil society formation for strengthening democratic processes. A comprehensive review of scholarly literature on civil society and its relationship with democratic development was conducted, alongside an analysis of the unique characteristics of EAEU member countries. Comparative assessments were made to determine the extent of civil society development, as measured by the Civil Society Participation Index, and the characteristics of democratic procedures, as measured by the Democracy Index. The findings indicate a link between civil society strength and democratic advancement. Specifically, countries with robust civil societies, such as the Republic of Armenia and the Kyrgyz Republic, demonstrate higher levels of democratic development. This underscores civil society's role as a catalyst for political and social transformations and state-building processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Dancing over the Sands.
- Author
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Mizel, Omar
- Subjects
- *
INDIGENOUS rights , *CONFLICT management , *RESOURCE management , *NATION building , *SAND , *PUBLIC sphere - Abstract
This study delves into the intricate dynamics between tribal communities and states, acknowledging their complex relationships. While not aiming for exhaustive understanding, it aims to illuminate the convoluted nature of these connections, which often puzzle the average citizen entrenched within other societal structures. By examining the relationships between tribal societies and the Iraqi, Syrian, Saudi Arabian, and Israeli (Palestinian) states, focusing on the interplay between tribal and public spheres, this study presents four fundamental models. Its primary goal is to discern whether these connections reflect harmony, conflict, or accommodation with established authorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Labour Migrations.
- Author
-
Eze, Okonkwo C., Nwamuo, Bright E., Eke, Jude Uwakwe, Echara, Echara Ambrose, and Ngwu, Elias C.
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL elites , *INDIGENOUS ethnic identity , *NATION building , *POLITICAL systems , *SUSPICION - Abstract
This study examined how labour migrations, which provide a veritable platform for nation-building, has been thwarted in Nigeria by the political elite through the politics of indigene-settler phenomenon. Though extant studies had examined the indigene-settler syndrome, the prospects of labour migration for nation-building in the country, which this entails, has been understudied. This paper, therefore, provides an insightful investigation into how the intricate web of politics of inclusion, exclusion, and deprivations between the indigenes and labour migrants or settlers in various states has tended to thwart nation-building efforts in the country. The study argues that the indigene-settler phenomenon undermines the facilitative capacity of labour migration for the actualization of the nation’s productive potentials and the construction of a common nationhood. It found that the indigene-settler syndrome is an elite construct to advance and protect their economic and political interests within the polity. It further contends that the elite’s coincidence of interests over scarce resources leads to inter-elite competition in which the indigeneity card is deployed as a potent politico-economic tool to gain advantage over contending elites. The study advocates for inclusive politics as the route to true nationhood devoid of mistrust, fears of marginalization and acrimonious competition for power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Sexuality securitized: how Russia’s invasion of Ukraine reconfigures (anti-)LGBTQ politics in Eastern Europe.
- Author
-
Luciani, Laura and Shevtsova, Maryna
- Subjects
- *
LGBTQ+ rights , *LGBTQ+ people , *SEXUAL minorities , *GEOPOLITICS , *NATION building , *HOMOPHOBIA - Abstract
This article examines how the shifting security landscape following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine is reconfiguring (anti)-LGBTQ politics in Eastern Europe. Drawing on securitization theory, we unravel the changing construction of LGBTQ rights as a security issue in Ukraine and Georgia. We posit that securitization of sexuality occurs at the intersection of processes taking place at multiple scales: nation-building, in its imbrication with militarized conflicts, and EU-Russia geopolitical competition. We argue that Russia’s war has led to diverging paths regarding anti-genderism and political homophobia in each country. In Ukraine, we identify a move towards desecuritization, through the incorporation of (some) sexual minorities into the struggle against Russian invasion. In Georgia, the ruling elites’ attempts to retain power in a complex geopolitical landscape have crystallized the securitization of LGBTQ people as a threat from which society has to be protected. The article suggests that a major security crisis can result in differential and ambiguous outcomes for (anti-)LGBTQ politics, both across geopolitical locations and within a single national space. Overall, it advances our understanding of how anti-genderism and political homophobia connect with geopolitical dynamics in Eastern Europe and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Using image-based inspection data to improve response predictions of earthquake-damaged unreinforced masonry buildings.
- Author
-
Haindl, Mathias, Smith, Ian F. C., and Beyer, Katrin
- Subjects
- *
SEISMIC response , *GROUND motion , *CONCRETE walls , *DEGREES of freedom , *NATION building , *EARTHQUAKE damage , *EARTHQUAKE hazard analysis - Abstract
Explicit representation of uncertainties is essential to improve the reliability of seismic assessments of earthquake-damaged buildings, particularly when dealing with unreinforced masonry buildings. Modern inspection techniques use images for detecting and quantifying the damage to a structure. Based on the principle of falsification, this paper evaluates how the use of information of damage that is obtained from images taken on earthquake-damaged buildings reduces the uncertainty when predicting the seismic response under a future earthquake. New model falsification criteria use information on the residual state of a building, such as shear cracks, residual roof displacements, and observation of out-of-plane failure. To demonstrate the effectiveness of these criteria in reducing the uncertainty in response predictions, results from a four-story unreinforced masonry building stiffened with reinforced concrete walls, which was experimentally tested under a sequence of ground motions, are assessed. Three commonly used modeling approaches (single degree of freedom (DOF) systems, multi DOF systems with four DOFs, and equivalent frame models) are used, where uncertainties in model parameters and model bias are included and propagated through the analysis. Out of the models used, and in the absence of any additional source of information, the proposed falsification criteria are most effective in connection with the equivalent frame model because this model can simulate the response at the element-level, while the simpler models can only represent the global response or the response at the storey-level. The results show that when using only the information on the presence of shear cracks, which might be the first and only source of information after an earthquake, the effectiveness of model falsification is increased, thus reducing the uncertainty in model parameter values and seismic response predictions through the use of image-based inspection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The Power of Everyday Networks in Nation-Building: The Case of Inter-Ethnic Friendships in Singapore.
- Author
-
Chua, Vincent, Tan, Ern Ser, and Mathews, Mathew
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 pandemic , *SOCIAL cohesion , *SOCIAL networks , *ETHNIC groups , *NATION building - Abstract
While scholars commonly see nation-building as a modernist project or a cultural assertion, we suggest that a "third way" is equally important. Analysing data from a representative survey of 2,001 Singaporean residents collected in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, we demonstrate that everyday social networks have been key to creating and maintaining Singaporean nationalism. We make the point that despite ambitious plans at transforming society, modernist projects must rely upon organic, routinised, and quotidian mechanisms such as friendship-making within and between ethnic groups for national cohesion to materialise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Tracing ideologies, influences, and politics: the shaping of a state monopoly in Turkey's sports system (1920s–1990s).
- Author
-
Erturan-Ogut, E. Esra and Şinoforoğlu, Tolga
- Subjects
- *
SPORTS administration , *MONOPOLIES , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *POLITICAL change , *NATION building - Abstract
Despite Turkey's changing political regimes, sports have remained under state governance since 1938. This article analyzes the ideologies, influences, and politics that have shaped this state monopoly over the sports system across three phases from the 1920s to the 1990s: establishment, stabilization, and instrumentalization. The establishment phase aimed to align sports with nation-building ideals, incorporating nationalist ideology and paramilitarism. The stabilization phase embraced a statist approach influenced by socio-economic conditions and Soviet influence. The instrumentalization phase, beginning with the Özal years, utilized sports for political discourse and socio-economic purposes, retaining the state-run system even during the era of neoliberalization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Impact of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor on Nation-Building in Pakistan: A Case Study of Balochistan.
- Author
-
Khan, Seema and Ahmed, Zahid Shahab
- Subjects
- *
NATION building , *ETHNIC differences , *TERRORISM , *FEDERAL government - Abstract
Since the creation of Pakistan in 1947, the state has been struggling in nation-building efforts because of mainly ethnic differences in the country. This is most evident in Balochistan, Pakistan's largest province, which has been suffering from insurgency since the late 1950s. Being home to the Gwadar Port, there is a growing Baloch resistance to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) since 2015. This situation necessitates a thorough examination of how the locals view and have reacted to the CPEC. This research investigates Baloch reactions to the CPEC and how the federal and provincial governments as well as Beijing have tried to address these challenges. China's investment is seen by the Baloch as neo-colonialism—something they must fight at all costs. Therefore, the CPEC, and particularly projects like the Gwadar Port, have added to the locals' grievances against the state, reflected through an increasing number of terrorist attacks in Balochistan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Estonianness in the Making: Transformations of Ethnic Democracy Model and Nationalism in Estonia.
- Author
-
Oskolkov, Petr
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL character , *DEMOCRACY , *NATION building , *NATIONALISM , *SCANDINAVIANS - Abstract
Estonian nationalism has undergone a transformation from 'state-seeking' to 'state-led' since acquiring independence, which has affected the Estonian national identity. Estonia is commonly labelled as an 'ethnic democracy'; however, we propose a dichotomy between open and closed ethnic democracies. The process of national state-building in Estonia is still going on, with the concept of 'Estonianness' consisting of the 'Finno-Ugric,' 'Nordic/Scandinavian,' and 'European' identity structures. These form the basis for an inclusive, or open ethnic democracy. Though Estonianness is primarily defined in cultural and linguistic terms, a newcomer may ascribe oneself to it and become a member of the ethno-civic nation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Kazakistan Örneğinde Türk Devletleri Teşkilatı Üyelerinin Ulus İnşa Politikaları.
- Author
-
GİRİTLİOĞLU, Sharifa
- Subjects
NATIONAL character ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,NEWS agencies ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors ,NATION building - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Abant Social Sciences / Abant Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi is the property of Journal of Abant Social Sciences and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The Dynamic Consequences of State Building: Evidence from the French Revolution.
- Author
-
Chambru, Cédric, Henry, Emeric, and Marx, Benjamin
- Subjects
NATION building ,ADMINISTRATIVE reform ,CAPACITY building ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,TAX laws - Abstract
How do radical reforms shape economic development over time? In 1790, the French Constituent Assembly overhauled the kingdom's organization to establish new local capitals. In some departments, the choice of local capitals over rival candidate cities was plausibly exogenous. We study how changes in administrative presence affect state capacity and development in the ensuing decades. In the short run, administrative proximity increases taxation and investments in law enforcement. In the long run, capitals obtain more public goods and grow faster. Our results shed light on the dynamic impacts of state building following one of history's most ambitious administrative reforms. (JEL D70, H41, H71, O18, O43) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. "Staka Woman Tumas": An Examination of Police Perspectives on Gender-Balancing within the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force.
- Author
-
Harry, Casandra and Watson, Danielle
- Subjects
POLICE reform ,ISLANDS ,NATION building ,GENDER ,POLICE - Abstract
In countries emerging out of conflict, state-building initiatives tend to prioritize gender-balancing. Post-conflict police reform in the Solomon Islands aligned with this set standard, as capacity-building efforts within the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force (RSIPF) prioritized the empowerment, inclusion, and promotion of women within the force. Through the use of Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) this study investigated, identified, and described common perceptions held by eighteen (18) officers about how they viewed gender reform in the RSIPF. The research found that although officers believed that gender-balancing was necessary, the increased inclusion of women conflicted with their traditional roles and positions and brought several challenges to the effective functioning of the force. It was also revealed that officers were of the view that the organization was not yet ready to fully embrace gender-balancing. The arguments presented herein further build on scholarly discussions about gender equality in policing organizations in small-island developing states in the Pacific. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Building Condition Auditing (BCA)—Improving Auditability—Reducing Ambiguity.
- Author
-
West, Jye, Siddhpura, Milind, Evangelista, Ana, and Haddad, Assed
- Subjects
LIFE cycles (Biology) ,NATION building ,AMBIGUITY ,BEST practices ,AUDITING - Abstract
BCA methodically assesses the state of a building's deterioration to support Maintenance, Safety, Function, and Compliance purposes. Originally used to assist in identifying urgent repair requirements, it has evolved and become one of the most used tools for assessing a building's outstanding maintenance liability when a building is transacted or acquired. Nevertheless, current practices involve several conflicts; for example, high costs are associated with inspections, inconsistent building component registers, and ambiguity and consistency regarding reporting parameters, all of which lead to compounding errors that reduce reliability. To address these gaps, the current research, involving one hundred and eighteen (118) active facilities managers and asset inspectors, suggests the development of an extension of the deterioration scale (0–7) and methodologies to reduce errors and ambiguity. Furthermore, it suggests using weighted indices to focus on crucial building components, thus improving condition assessment. As was found, these tools improve the accuracy of BCA, facilitate better management of the asset's life cycle, and provide support in decision-making. This study adds consistency, limits subjectivity, and provides a framework applicable to different building types, assisting future management for sustainability. It, therefore, stands to serve the field by providing detailed and concise best practices for conducting condition audits on built assets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. ДО ПИТАННЯ СУЧАСНОГО РОЗУМІННЯ УЗУРПАЦІЇ ВЛАДИ (КОНСТИТУЦІЙНО-ПРАВОВИЙ АСПЕКТ)
- Author
-
О. В., Марцеляк
- Subjects
STATE power ,POLITICAL corruption ,NATION building ,SOCIAL development ,PUBLIC officers - Abstract
It is indicated that an in-depth analysis of the state-building processes of a number of countries, especially the states that arose on the territory of the former Soviet Union, proves that some of them, despite the democratic principles of state and social development declared at the level of national constitutions, show tendencies or even practically implement concrete steps towards usurpation of power. At the same time, we should note that outwardly, state building (the development of the constitutional doctrine and state-building practice of these countries) takes place in general according to the ways of democratic development developed by the international community and within the framework of the provisions of the Basic Law of these countries. The article examines the legal nature of power usurpation. Attention is drawn to the fact that the crime of illegal seizure of power is increasingly occurring in the world today, especially for the states that emerged on the territory of the former Soviet Union. At the same time, the state development of these countries nominally originates in accordance to the democratic steps acceptable by the international community and within the framework of the prescriptions of their Fundamental Law. This convincingly confirms that the 21
st century is characterized by the development of new forms of power usurpation, and on the example of Russia, attention is focused on such forms. It is concluded that the usurpation of power in this country is characterized by the fact that the institution of the president has lost the features of a democratically formed body of state power. The head of the state has concentrated powers oneself, which clearly indicates his attempt to appropriate the other authorities power functions, excess of powers, abuse of power, termination of constitutionally created institutions, bodies and legitimately appointed persons, violation of a whole range of legislation that regulates the status, functions, competence, forms and methods of activity of higher authorities, establishment of strict control and use of other levers of influence on the federation and its subjects authorities activities. This is accompanied by political corruption, the use of various types of bribery for government officials and civil servants, V. Putin's collusion with representatives of other governmental branches, parliamentary factions, which is disguised as political rivalry. Thus, the multifaceted nature of the usurpation of power in Russia at the constitutional level manifested itself in massive violations of the rights and freedoms of individuals established by the Fundamental Law of the country, transformation of the form of government, political regime, and state system established by the constitution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Latin America and Eastern Europe. Ideas for Historical Comparisons
- Author
-
Klaus Buchenau
- Subjects
latin america ,eastern europe ,state building ,nation building ,imperial legacies ,History of Balkan Peninsula ,DR1-2285 - Abstract
This article compares state and nation building in Latin America with Eastern Europe, including the Balkans. It comes to the conclusion that different imperial legacies (land empires vs. maritime empires) have led to different interpretative paradigms of understanding the world, with national/ethnic problems dominating the literature in and on Eastern Europe, whereas a social and post-colonial paradigm has become the dominant key of self-understanding in Latin America. As one of the consequences, the terms „left“ and „right“ do not have the same meaning in both regions. The article concludes with outlining a research agenda for further comparative work.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. AN EXERCISE IN NATION-BUILDING.
- Author
-
Parker, Anna
- Subjects
- *
NATIONALISM , *SOLIDARITY , *CULTURE , *NATION building , *POLITICAL development - Abstract
The article focuses on the emergence of the sokol movement in the late 19th and early 20th centuries in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, highlighting its role in fostering Czech national identity through physical culture. Topics include the historical context of Czech subjugation, Miroslav Tyrš' influence in developing the sokol gymnastic system as a tool for nation-building, and the movement's rapid spread and impact on Czech culture and solidarity.
- Published
- 2023
41. Snapshot.
- Subjects
PERIODICAL awards ,NATION building ,BEST friends ,ROYAL houses ,GIRAFFES - Abstract
The article from Woman's Day (Australia Edition) features snapshots of various celebrities and their families engaging in different activities. From Rihanna posing with her sons for a holiday campaign to Salma Hayek dazzling in a red dress at an awards event, the piece captures moments of joy and connection. The photos also showcase celebrities like Robert Irwin and Prince William meeting up for conservation work, highlighting their shared commitment to important causes. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
42. The integrated Mexican nation-state building in the 20th century.
- Author
-
Zhang, Qingren
- Subjects
INDIGENOUS peoples of Mexico ,NATIONAL unification ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,NATIONAL character ,NATION building - Abstract
Since gaining independence in the early 19th century, Mexico embarked on a path toward building a nation-state. In criticizing the evolutionism that promotes white supremacy, Mexican society has embarked on a journey of introspection, delving into the essence of its indigenous national character. Following the Mexican Revolution at the turn of the 20th century, a nationalism advocating for integration was firmly established. The Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) government incorporated the principles of national integration into the broader building of the nation-state. On the one hand, it affirmed the crucial role of indigenous peoples and their cultures, tracing the origins of the Mexican nation-state back to these roots. On the other hand, the promotion of unified education, coupled with the implementation of a land-centered state corporatist system, aimed to achieve the integration and governance of Indigenous peoples, thereby incorporating them into the nation-building process and ultimately facilitating the integration of the nation-state. While the PRI government's integration efforts led to tendencies towards marginalization and assimilation of indigenous peoples, alongside insufficient attention to their rights and political participation, it fundamentally changed the historically unrecognized status of indigenous communities since the colonial era. These efforts primarily addressed the issues that had challenged Mexican social development concerning indigenous peoples since the colonial era, contributing to maintaining national stability over an extended period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. How the Taliban are Institutionalizing the Propagation of Virtue and Enjoinment of Vice in Afghanistan.
- Author
-
Rahimi, Haroun
- Subjects
DUE process of law ,AUTHORITARIANISM ,ISLAMIC law ,NATION building ,ETHICS - Abstract
This article examines the body of rules that the Taliban has enacted to institutionalize the propagation of virtue and enjoinment of vice by presenting a critique of the institution from within the Islamic tradition. In so doing, this study reveals important tensions in the way that the Taliban has tried to constitute the Ministry of Propagation of Virtue and Enjoinment of Vice jurisprudentially, suggesting similar tensions in the project of Islamic state-building more generally. It illustrates the incongruities that exist in the jurisprudential constitution of this institution between a desire to constitute the ministry as the morality police of an Islamic state and the competing demands of due process, prohibition of extrajudicial punishments, protection of privacy, respect for jurisprudential plurality, and equal application of sharia to the ruler and the ruled in Islamic jurisprudence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The State and Complex Threat Syndrome in the Sahel: Conflict, Crime, and Terror.
- Author
-
Okoli, Al Chukwuma
- Subjects
- *
CRIME , *NATION building , *SUSTAINABILITY , *RADICALISM - Abstract
This study examines the phenomena of complex threat syndrome (CTS) in the Sahel from the standpoint of the increasing dysfunctionality of the states in this area. The study posits that the CTS in the Sahel reflects the logic of a conflict-crime-terror conundrum in the context of rising state fragility. The crisis of legitimacy and governability in the Sahel, instantiated by the weaknesses of the states to facilitate governance, security, and development effectively and sustainably, has brought about conditions that exacerbate anti-state militantism and extremism. The inability of governments to demonstrate requisite competencies in the face of these threats bolsters and reproduces widespread criminal indulgence, impunity, and opportunism. Critical indicators of this include rising jihadist insurgencies, banditry, communal conflicts, and other forms of violence. The consequence has been a complex threat situation where violent conflicts and crimes reinforce each other to engender an enduring climate of insecurity and crisis. Mitigating such a complex security scenario requires a deliberate effort by the authorities in the Sahel to optimize statecraft through effective state-building, security governance reforms, and functional state-society synergy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Nobody is leaving! Ottoman officials, their families and the struggle over Ottoman imperial sovereignty in Yemen after the Mudros Armistice, 1918–1924.
- Author
-
Kuehn, Thomas
- Subjects
- *
WAR , *ARMISTICES , *SOVEREIGNTY , *BORDERLANDS , *NATION building , *OTTOMAN Empire - Abstract
This article explores the struggles over Ottoman sovereignty in Yemen from the October 1918 armistice to the proclamation of the Republic of Turkey in October 1923. The governor-general (vali), Mahmud Nedim, and Imam Yahya, the principal local ally of the Ottomans, succeeded in upholding Ottoman sovereignty over most of highland Yemen against the Armistice terms, the Treaty of Sèvres, and their local and British rivals, while receiving the political backing of the Ottoman resistance movement in Anatolia under Mustafa Kemal. Efforts of the vali, the imam, and the British to prevent ordinary Ottomans from leaving and entering Yemen were at the centre of these struggles. This changed in 1923 when Mustafa Kemal and Yahya turned to state-building projects emphasising post-Ottoman forms of sovereignty. I thus highlight several aspects of ordinariness. First, the continuation of daily governmental routines in Yemen was a key element of Ottoman efforts to resist British attempts to impose a post-Ottoman political order. Further, Yemeni Ottomans and Ottoman officials were reduced to different degrees of ordinariness because the disintegration of the Ottoman state after the war often eliminated their sources of income. Finally, struggles against the consequences of the Armistice are often reduced to a 'Turkish War of Independence' and the actions of policy makers in administrative centres, like Istanbul and Ankara. Studying the end of the Ottoman Empire from the vantage points of Yemen's 'spatial ordinariness' as an imperial borderland and of ordinary Ottomans disrupts this 'methodological nationalism' and allows for a more nuanced understanding of the post-Armistice years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Nusantara: Climate Dilemmas of a "Green" Capital City in Indonesia.
- Author
-
FISHER, MICAH, LONGMAN, RYAN J., MARYUDI, AHMAD, and LARASWATI, DWI
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change mitigation , *CLIMATE change , *HAZARDS , *SUSTAINABLE development , *NATION building - Abstract
Even before Indonesia's independence, its leaders had drafted plans to relocate the capital city. Proponents gave various reasons at different times, but with Jakarta's stifling traffic and perennial flooding, the government is now translating visions of relocation into action. Construction of the new capital, Nusantara, is already underway in East Kalimantan province. Nusantara is an ambitious and symbolic nation-building project that positions Indonesia as an increasingly confident player on the international stage. Underpinning these plans are aims to solve the more complex environmental hazards and challenges associated with climate change. Much ink has been spilled on the social, political, and technical dimensions of Nusantara, but less scrutiny has focused on the assumptions of a climate forward capital city. As this green developmentalism takes shape, we more closely examine the climate dimensions of the project, exploring the extent of its climate mitigation impacts, while also homing in on its potential for adaptation and resilience. Our findings suggest that under the project's current course, emissions are likely to increase significantly, worsening vulnerabilities in Jakarta and creating new ones in East Kalimantan. Nevertheless, the future remains unwritten, with many crossroads and opportunities to change direction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
47. Mosque Construction as Nation-Building: The case of Turkey.
- Author
-
Uzer, Umut
- Subjects
- *
RELIGIOUS institutions , *MOSQUES , *NATION building , *CALIPHATE , *REFORMS , *DEMOCRACY - Abstract
This article analyzes the question of mosque construction and its interrelationship vis-à-vis nation-building in contemporary Turkey. The dynamics of a secular state ruling over a conservative society have always been conflictual in republican Turkey, and this ever since the modern state began initiating a number of radical secular reforms in the 1920s and the 1930s. Among those reforms, disruptive in a previously conservative society, were the dissolution of the caliphate and dismemberment of religious institutions, coupled with widespread Westernizing policies including the adoption of Western sartorial habits, emphasis on science and technology, and changing the alphabet from the traditional Arabic to the current modern (romanized) Turkish script. On the other hand, the advent of democracy and changeover of government in 1950 brought with it the emergence of a renewed religious discourse and a desire for more mosque construction in order to accentuate the Islamic facet of Turkish culture. Therefore, the religious dimension of Turkish identity has increasingly been buttressed by mosque construction by right-wing governments, reaching its zenith with the current Justice and Development Party (JDP) government (beginning in 2002). Coupled with the emergence of an illiberal democracy bolstered by Turkish populism, this article proposes to analyze the linkage between mosque construction and the building of an Islamic conservative Turkish nation contrasting the secular Turkish identity of the ancien régime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The Desires of the People: Post-war nationalism in 1919 Lebanon.
- Author
-
Abou Jaoude, Tarek
- Subjects
- *
WAR , *LEBANESE , *NATION building , *NATIONALISM , *WISHES - Abstract
This article looks at the postwar period of 1918–1919, specifically focusing on the situation in Lebanon and the Levant following the Allied occupation of Ottoman territories. The aim of the article is to reexamine the situation in the former Ottoman territories that became modern Lebanon, and assess the nationalistic wishes as expressed by their people. To do this, the global and regional political context is established, before homing in on the establishment of the "1919 Inter-Allied Commission on Mandates in Turkey," more commonly known as the King-Crane Commission. This fact-finding mission provides a uniquely direct understanding of the wishes of the Lebanese people, so its work, as well as the complementary writings of its members, are analyzed contextually to determine what accurate results can be derived. By doing so, the article sheds further light on Lebanese popular will after World War I. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Culinary Complexities in Turkey and Greece: On Food, Nation, and Identity in the Aegean.
- Author
-
Örs, İlay Romain
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL ecology , *NATION-state , *NATION building , *NATIONALISM , *INTEGRALS - Abstract
Relations between Greece and Turkey are often imagined in binary terms. A common question typifies such bilateral thinking: Is baklava Greek or Turkish? Popular discussions attaching national labels to select dishes present food as a site for showcasing competitive and stereotypical conceptualizations of identity. In Greece and Turkey cuisines have been integral elements of nation-building processes that display forms of gastronationalism which can be traced in debates over the origins of food items that take place in everyday discourse or on international platforms. Challenging such formulations based on "methodological nationalism" which restricts the analysis of cultural processes to those conducted by nation-states the proposed perspective of "culinary complexities" both underlines the difficulty of containing cultural processes within the confines of nation-states and recognizes recent trends regarding food as a realm in which to express regional identifications that defy and diversify dualities between Turkey and Greece in the shared social ecology of the Aegean. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Becoming Catawba: Catawba Indian Women and Nation-Building, 1540-1840.
- Author
-
La Vere, David
- Subjects
- *
INDIAN women (Asians) , *NATION building - Abstract
The article "Becoming Catawba: Catawba Indian Women and Nation-Building, 1540-1840" explores the resilience and ingenuity of Catawba Indian women in preserving their identity and nation amidst European colonization and cultural changes. Through kinship, land control, and pottery production, Catawba women played a crucial role in maintaining their culture and land ownership. The article highlights the challenges faced by native peoples in the Southeast, emphasizing the importance of Catawba women in retaining their lands and cultural heritage. The author, Brooke M. Bauer, provides a detailed account of how Catawba women's efforts were instrumental in the survival of the Catawba nation. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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