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Negotiating Nationalism - Nation-Building, Federalism, and Secession in the Multinational State (Hardcover, New)
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Negotiating Nationalism - Nation-Building, Federalism, and Secession in the Multinational State (Hardcover, New)
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There are at least three times as many nations as states in the
world today. This book addresses some of the special challenges
that arise when two or more national communities re the same
(multinational) state. As a work in normative political philosophy
its principal aim is to evaluate the political and institutional
choices of citizens and governments in states with rival
nationalist discourses and nation-building projects. The first
chapter takes stock of a decade of intense philosophical and
sociological debates about the nature of nations and nationalism.
Norman identifies points of consensus in these debates, as well as
issues that do not have to be definitively resolved in order to
proceed with normative theorizing. He recommends thinking of
nationalism as a form of discourse, a way of arguing and mobilizing
support, and not primarily as a belief in a principle. A liberal
nationalist, then, is someone who uses nationalist arguments, or
appeals to nationalist sentiments, in order to rally support for
liberal policies. The rest of the book is taken up with the three
big political and institutional choices in multinational states.
First, what can political actors and governments legitimately do to
shape citizens' national identity or identities? This is the core
question in the ethics of nation-building, or what Norman calls
national engineering. Second, how can minority and majority
national communities each be given an adequate degree of
self-determination, including equal rights to carry out
nation-building projects, within a democratic federal state?
Finally, even in a world where most national minorities cannot have
their own state, how should the constitutions of multinational
federations regulate secessionist politics within the rule of law
and the ideals of democracy? More than a decade after Yael Tamir's
ground-breaking Liberal Nationalism, Norman finds that these three
great practical and institutional questions have still rarely been
addressed within a comprehensive normative theory of nationalism.
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