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MGIMO University School of Government and International
Affairs
Syllabus approved Dean, The MGIMO School of Government and
International Affairs
Mikhail Troitskiy « » 2019
Nationalism and Nation-Building Undergraduate Course
Syllabus
Instructor Dr. Vladimir A. Zhdanov
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© V.A. Zhdanov, 2019 © MGIMO University, 2019 This syllabus is
designed in accordance with the MGIMO Educational Standard for the
Bachelor Program in International Affairs.
Author_____________________________________________ Dr. V.A.
Zhdanov
Director MGIMO Library_____________________________M.V.
Reshetnikova
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PART 1: INSTRUCTOR INFORMATION AND COURSE DESCRIPTION
1.1 General information
• Full course title: Nationalism and Nation-Building • Type of
course: Elective • Level of course B.A. • Year of study: 3rd •
Number of ECTS credits allocated: 2 • Name of the instructor: Dr.
Vladimir A. Zhdanov • E-mail: [email protected]
1.2 Course aims and learning outcomes The course examines the
theoretical and historical evolution of nationalism and
nation-building by providing a survey of the major theoretical
approaches, such as instrumentalist, constructivist, and
primordialist. It discusses the impact of nationalism on state
formation and on patterns of political violence. The definitions of
national identity and citizenship will be analyzed as well. At the
end the course will address the effects of globalization and the
resurgence of nationalism in the post-Cold War era. Learning
outcomes By the end of this course students should be able to
understand the current explanations of nationalism and state
formation. Students will develop an in-depth knowledge of major
topics within the field of nationalism studies.
1.3 Course requirements and grading plan
Course requirements Students are required to attend no less than
80% of classes and be prepared for class discussions. Reading of
the required materials and active engagement in class discussions
is mandatory.
Grading plan Grading is on a Pass/Fail basis. Three 30-minute
in-class tests – 25% each. Participation in class discussions –
25%. In-class presentations are not mandatory but will be highly
appreciated. Such a presentation (up to 15 minutes) is performed at
will by a student once in the semester. The presentation has to be
based on some of the current week’s suggested readings. Reading
materials will be sent as attached files in an email.
mailto:[email protected]
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PART 2. COURSE CONTENT
2.2. Course content and readings by topic Topic 1: Introduction
(lecture and discussion) Nationalism as ideology. Ethnic
(“Eastern”) and civic (“Western”) nationalisms. Required
readings:
1. Clark C. ‘The Nation-state, civic and ethnic dimensions.’ –
Cordell K., Wolff S. (eds.). Routledge Handbook of Ethnic Conflict.
New York: Routledge, 2011, p. 45-52.
2. Gellner E. Nations and Nationalism. Oxford: Basil Blackwell,
1983. Chapter 1 (p. 1-7). 3. Smith A. The Nation in History.
Historiographical Debates about Ethnicity and
Nationalism. Cambridge: Polity Press, 2000. Introduction (p.
1-4). Suggested readings:
1. Hylland-Eriksen T. Ethnicity and Nationalism Anthropological
Perspectives. 3rd ed. New York: Pluto Press, 2010. Chapter 1.
2. Larsen C.A. ‘Revitalizing the ‘civic’ and ‘ethnic’
distinction. Perceptions of nationhood across two dimensions, 44
countries and two decades.’ – Nations and nationalism. Vol. 24
(2017), no. 4, p. 970-993.
3. McCrone D. The Sociology of Nationalism. London: Routledge,
1998. Chapters 1 & 2. 4. Smith A.D. Nationalism: Theory,
Ideology, History. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2001. Chapters 1 & 2. Topic 2: Main approaches to the
study of nationalism: Primordialism, perennialism and
ethnosymbolism (lecture and discussion) Kinship. Ethnicity.
Continuous and recurrent perennialisms. La long durée. Required
readings:
1. Smith A.D. Nationalism: Theory, Ideology, History. Chapters 3
(p.49-56) & 4 (p. 78-86).
2.1 Types of work Types of work Academic hours ECTS credits
Total 72 2 Total for lectures and discussions 32 Lectures 16
Discussions 16 Homework 40 Reading assignments 13 Preparation for
the first test 9 Preparation for the second test 9 Preparation for
the third test 9
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Suggested readings: 1. Armstrong J.A. Nations before
Nationalism. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North
Carolina Press, 1982. Chapters 1 & 2. 2. Armstrong J.A.
‘Definitions, periodization, and prospects for the ‘long durée’.’ –
Nations
and Nationalism. Vol. 10 (2004), no. 1/2, p. 9-18. 3. Connor W.
‘The Timelessness of Nations.’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 10
(2004), no.
1/2, p. 35-48. 4. Smith A.D. The Nation in History. Chapter 2.
5. Smith A.D. ‘Nations before Nationalism? Myth and Symbolism in
John Armstrong’s
Perspective.’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 21 (2015), no. 1,
p. 165-170.
Topic 3: Main approaches to the study of nationalism: Modernism
(lecture and discussion) The varieties of modernist paradigm
(socioeconomic, sociocultural, political, ideological,
constructivist). The role of elites. Required readings:
1. Smith A.D. Nationalism: Theory, Ideology, History. Chapters 3
(p. 45-49, p. 57-60). Suggested readings:
1. Anderson B. Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin
and Spread of Nationalism. Revised edition. London: Verso, 2006.
Chapters 2 & 3.
2. Gellner E. Nations and Nationalism. Oxford: Basil Blackwell,
1983. Chapters 3-6. 3. Hobsbawm E.J. Nations and Nationalism since
1780. Programme, Myth, Reality. 2nd. ed.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992. Chapters 2 & 3.
4. Smith A.D. The Nation in History. Capter 3. 5. Taylor C.
‘Nationalism and Modernity’ – Beiner R. (ed.). Theorizing
Nationalism. Albany:
State University of New York Press, 1999, p. 219-245.
Topic 4: The origin and historic forms of the state (lecture and
discussion) Socio-economic and cognitive bases of the state.
“Roving bandits” and “stationary bandits”. City-states and
multi-ethnic empires. Required readings:
1. Olson M, ‘Dictatorship, Democracy, and Development.’ –
American Political Science Review. Vol. 87 (1993), no. 3, p.
567-574.
Suggested readings: 1. Finer S.E. The History of Government From
the Earliest Times. Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1997. 2. Fukuyama F. The Origins of Political Order. From
Prehuman Times to the French
Revolution. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011. 3. Mann
M. The Sources of Social Power. The Rise of Classes and
Nation-States. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2003. Chapter 3.
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4. Steinberger P.J. The Idea of the State. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2004. 5. Tilly C. ‘War Making and State Making as
Organized Crime.’ – Evans P.B.,
Rueschemeyer D., Skocpol T. (eds.). Bringing the State Back In.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985, p. 169-191.
Topic 5. The nation-state (lecture and discussion) The “Military
Revolution”. ‘War made states and states made war.’ Unification
nationalism and separatist nationalism. State-centered and
volk-centered routes to nation-statehood. Required readings:
1. McCrone D. The Sociology of Nationalism, chapter 5 (p.
92-101). Suggested readings:
1. Breuilly J. Nationalism and the State. 2nd ed. Manchester:
Manchester University Press, 1993. Chapters 2 & 3.
2. Hechter M. Containing Nationalism. Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2000. Chapter 4. 3. Schwartzwald J.L. The Rise of the
Nation-State in Europe. Absolutism, Enlightenment and
Revolution, 1603-1815. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company
Publishers, 2017. 4. Tilly C. ‘Reflections on the History of
European State-Making.’ –Tilly C. (ed.). The
Formation of National States in Western Europe. Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, 1975, p. 3-83.
5. Tilly C. ‘Western State-Making and Theories of Political
Transformation.’ – The Formation of National States in Western
Europe, p. 601-638.
Topic 6. Identity (lecture and discussion) Social identity.
Stages of identity acquisition. Cognitive and affective elements of
identity. Multiple identities. In-groups and out-groups. Required
readings:
1. Sidanius J., Haley H., Molina L., Pratto F. ‘Vladimir’s
Choice and the Distribution of Social Resources: A Group Dominance
Perspective’ – Group Processes & Intergroup Relations, vol. 10,
2007, no. 2, p. 257-265.
Suggested readings:
1. Billig M. ‘Henri Tajfel’s ‘Cognitive aspects of prejudice’
and the psychology of bigotry’ – British Journal of Social
Psychology. Vol. 41, 2002, p. 171-178.
2. Phinney J. S. ‘Identity Formation across Cultures: The
Interaction of Personal, Societal, and Historical Change.’ – Human
Development. Vol. 43, 2000, p. 27–31.
3. Phinney J. S. ‘Bridging identities and disciplines: Advances
and challenges in understanding multiple identities.’ – Azmitia M.,
Syed M., Radmacher K. (eds.), The intersections of personal and
social identities. New Directions for Child and Adolescent
Development, vol. 120, 2008, p. 97–109.
4. Tajfel H. ‘Cognitive Aspects of Prejudice’ – Journal of
Biosocial Science. Vol. 1, S. 1, 1969, p. 173-191.
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5. van Knippenberg A.F.M. . ‘Intergroup Differences in Group
Perceptions.’ – Tajfel H. (ed.). The Social Dimension. Vol. 2.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984, p. 560-578.
Topic 7. National identity (lecture and discussion) National
identity markers. The national idea. Required readings:
1. Smith A.D. National Identity. London: Penguin Books, 1991.
Chapter 1 (p. 8-18). Suggested readings:
1. Cram L. ‘Identity and European integration: diversity as the
source of integration.’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 15 (2009),
no.1, p. 109-128.
2. Cruz C. ‘Identity and Persuasion: How Nations Remember their
Past and Make their Futures.’ – World Politics. Vol. 52 (2000), no.
3, p. 275-312.
3. Hechter M. Containing Nationalism. Chapter 6. 4. Hobsbawm
E.J. Nations and Nationalism Since 1780. New York: Cambridge
University
Press, 1990. Chapter 3. 5. Langlands R. ‘Britishness or
Englishness? The historical problem of national identity in
Britain.’ – Nations and nationalism. Vol. 5 (1999), no. 1, p.
53-69. 6. McCrone D., Bechhofer F. Understanding National Identity.
Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2015.
Topic 8. Sovereignty (lecture and discussion) Westphalian
sovereignty. Self-determination. The external and internal aspects
of sovereignty. Required readings:
1. Hechter M. Containing Nationalism, chapter 7 (p. 115-126).
Suggested readings:
1. Boli J. ‘Sovereignty from a World Policy Perspective’ –
Krasner S.D. (ed.). Problematic Sovereignty. Contested Rules and
Political Possibilities. New York: Columbia University Press, 2001,
p. 53-82.
2. Krasner S.D. Sovereignty. Organized Hypocrisy. Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, 1999.
3. Nootens G. ‘Liberal nationalism and the sovereign territorial
ideal.’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 12 (2006), no.1, p.
35-50.
4. Sluga G. ‘What is national self-determination? Nationality
and psychology during the apogee of nationalism.’ – Nations and
Nationalism. Vol. 11 (2005), no.1, p. 1-20.
5. Stråth B. ‘Identity and social solidarity: an ignored
connection. A historical perspective on the state of Europe and its
nations.’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 23 (2017), no.2, p.
227-247.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westphalian_sovereignty
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Topic 9: Citizenship (lecture and discussion). Jus sanguinis and
jus soli. Citizenship in history. Multiple citizenships.
Communitarianism and multiculturalism. Citizenship and welfare
state. Required readings:
1. Bellami R. ‘The Making of Modern Citizenship’ – Bellami R.,
Castiglione D., Santoro E. (eds.). Lineages of European
Citizenship. Rights, Belonging and Participation in Eleven
Nation-States. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004, (p. 3-19).
Suggested readings: 1. Brown D. ‘Why is the nation-state so
vulnerable to ethnic nationalism?’ – Nations and
Nationalism. Vol. 4 (1998), no.1, p. 1-15. 2. Brubaker R.
Citizenship and Nationhood in France and Germany. Cambridge,
MA:
Harvard University Press, 1994. 3. Kissane B., Sitter N. ‘The
marriage of state and nation in European constitutions’ –
Nations
and Nationalism. Vol. 16 (2010), no.1, p. 49-67. 4. Reeskens T.,
Hooghe M. ‘Beyond the civic-ethnic dichotomy: investigating the
structure
of citizenship concepts across thirty-three countries’ – Nations
and Nationalism. Vol. 16 (2010), no.4, p. 579-597.
5. Schnapper D. ‘Citizenship and national identity in Europe.’ –
Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 8 (2002), no.1, p. 2-14.
6. Stoker G. et al. (eds.) Prospects for Citizenship. London:
Bloomsbury Academic, 2011.
Topic 10. The nationalism of the rich (lecture and discussion)
Internal colonialism. Sub-state nationalism. Regionalism and
regionalization. Devolution. Required readings:
1. McCrone D. The Sociology of Nationalism. Chapter 7 (p.
128-148).
Suggested readings: 1. Dalle Mulle E. The Nationalism of the
Rich. Discourses and Strategies of Separatist
Parties in Catalonia, Flanders, Northern Italy and Scotland.
London: Routledge, 2018. 2. Duerr G.M.E. Secessionism and the
European Union. The Future of Flanders, Scotland,
and Catalonia. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2015. 3. Huysseune
M. Modernity and Secession. The Social Sciences and the Political
Discourse
of the Lega Nord in Italy. New York: Berghahn Books, 2006. 4.
Keating M., McGarry J. (eds.). Minority Nationalism and the
Changing International
Order. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001. Chapter 1 (p.
3-10).
Topic 11. Far-right nationalism and xenophobia (lecture and
discussion) Changing class structures and the rise of
post-materialist values. The end of the Cold War and the decline of
support for mainstream center-left and center-right parties. The
rise of populism.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jus_sanguinishttp://www.worldcat.org/title/secessionism-and-the-european-union-the-future-of-flanders-scotland-and-catalonia/oclc/927103684&referer=brief_resultshttp://www.worldcat.org/title/secessionism-and-the-european-union-the-future-of-flanders-scotland-and-catalonia/oclc/927103684&referer=brief_results
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Required readings: 1. Eatwell R. ‘The rebirth of the ‘extreme
right’ in Western Europe?’ – Parliamentary
Affairs. Vol. 53 (2000), p. 410-424.
Suggested readings: 1. Götz I. ‘The rediscovery of ‘the
national’ in the 1990s – contexts, new cultural forms and
practices in reunified Germany.’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol.
22 (2016), no.4, p. 803-823.
2. Halikiopoulou D., Mock S., Vasilopoulou S. ‘The civic
zeitgeist: nationalism and liberal values in the European radical
right.’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 19 (2013), no.1, p.
107-127.
3. Hosking G. ‘Why has nationalism revived in Europe?’ – Nations
and Nationalism. Vol. 22 (2016), no.2, p. 210-221.
4. Mudde C. ‘Europe’s Populist Surge. A Long Time in the
Making.’ – Foreign Affairs. November/December 2016, p. 25-30.
5. Norris P. Radical Right: Voters and Parties in the Electoral
Market. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. Chapters
1-3.
6. Rooduijn M. ‘Vox populismus: a populist radical right
attitude among the public?’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 20
(2014), no.1, p. 80-92.
Topic 12. Post-colonialism and the nation (lecture and
discussion) Colonial legacies. The politicization of ethnic
difference. The ethnicization of the bureaucracy. Ethnic
clientelist networks. Administrative rent. The ethnicization of
political conflicts. Required readings:
1. Wimmer A. ‘Who owns the state? Understanding ethnic conflict
in post-colonial societies.’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 3
(1997), no. 4, p. 635-653.
Suggested readings: 1. Brownlee J. ‘Can America Nation-Build?’ –
World Politics. Vol. 59, no. 2 (2007), p.
314-340. 2. Chatteijee P. ‘Whose Imagined Community?’ –
Balakrishnan G.(ed.). Mapping the Nation.
London: Verso, 1996, p. 214-225. 3. Ghani A., Lockhart C. Fixing
Failed State. A Framework of Rebuilding a Fractured
World. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008. 4. Kaplan S.
Fixing Fragile States. A New Paradigm for Development. Westport,
CT: Praeger
Security International, 2008.
Topic 13. Post-Communist nationalism (lecture and discussion)
“Democracy with adjectives”. The impact of structural constraints.
The failure of “Communist nationalism”. The triadic nexus.
Nationalizing states. Re-emergence of civil society.
Required readings: 1. McCrone D. The Sociology of Nationalism.
Chapter 8 (p. 149-166).
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Suggested readings: 1. Beissinger M.R. Nationalist Mobilization
and the Collapse of the Soviet Union.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004. 2. Darden K.,
Grzymała-Busse A. ‘The Great Divide: Literacy, Nationalism, and
the
Communist Collapse,’ – World Politics. Vol. 59 (2006), no.1, p.
83-115. 3. Marsh R. ‘The Nature of Russia’s Identity: The Theme of
“Russia and the West” in
Post-Soviet Culture. – Nationalities Papers. Vol. 35 (2007), no.
3, p. 555-578. 4. Mentzel P.C. ‘Nationalism, civil society, and the
revolution of 1989.’ – Nations and
Nationalism. Vol. 18 (2012), no.4, p. 624-642. 5. Mevius M.
‘Reappraising Communism and Nationalism.’ – Nationalities Papers.
Vol. 37
(2009), no. 4, p. 377-400. 6. O'Dwyer C. ‘Runaway
State-Building: How Political Parties Shape States in
Postcommunist Eastern Europe.’ – World Politics. Vol.56 (July
2004), no.4, p. 520-553.
Topic 14. Modern ethnic conflicts and state breaking (lecture
and discussion) Stateless nationalisms. Ethnonationalist triads.
Minority rights. Nationalist self-images and images of others.
Ethnic cleansing and genocide. Required readings:
1. Wilson R. ‘The politics of contemporary ethno-nationalist
conflicts.’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 7 (2001), no. 3, p.
365-381.
Suggested readings: 1. Cederman L.E., Girardin L., Gleditsch
K.S. ‘Ethnonationalist triads. Assessing the
Influence of Kin Groups on Civil Wars.’ – World Politics. Vol.
61 (2009), no. 3, p. 403-37. 2. Cederman L.E., Weideman N.B.,
Gleditsch K.S. ‘Horizontal Inequalities and
Ethnonationalist Civil War: A Global Comparison.’ – American
Political Science Review. Vol. 105 (2011), no. 3, 478-495.
3. van Evera S. ‘Hypotheses on Nationalism and War.’ –
International Security. Vol. 18, no. 4 (1994), p. 5-39.
4. Laitin D.D., Fearon J.D. ‘Violence and the Social
Construction of Ethnic Identity,’ – International Organization.
Vol. 54 (2000), no. 4, p. 845-877.
5. Saideman S. ‘Explaining the International Relations of
Secessionist Conflicts.’ – International Organization. Vol. 51
(1997), no. 4, p. 721-753.
Topic 15. Nationalism and globalization (lecture and discussion)
Economic interconnectedness. New information technologies.
Transnationalism. Globalization and national identity.
Multiculturalism. Cosmopolitanism. Required readings:
1. Kaldor M. ‘Nationalism and Globalisation.’ – Nations and
Nationalism. Vol. 10 (2004), no. 1/2, p. 161-176.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genocide
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Suggested readings: 1. Ariely G. ‘Globalisation and the decline
of national identity? An exploration across
sixty-three counties.’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 18
(2012), no. 3, p. 461-482. 2. Croucher S.L. Globalization and
Belonging. The Politics of Identity in a Changing World.
Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2004. 3.
Habermas J. ‘The European Nation-state—Its Achievements and Its
Limits’ – Mapping the
Nation, London: Verso, 1996. 4. Nairn T. The Faces of
Nationalism, London: Verso, 1997. Chapter 2. 5. Tønnesson S.
‘Globalising national states.’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 10
(2004), no.
1/2, p. 179-194.
Topic 16: Conclusion (lecture and discussion) The future of
nationalism. Required readings:
1. Smith A.D. Nationalism: Theory, Ideology, History, chapter 6.
Suggested readings:
1. Newman S. ‘Nationalism in Postindustrial Societies: Why
States Still Matter.’ – Comparative Politics. Vol. 33, no. 1
(2000), p. 21-41.
2. Hechter M. Containing Nationalism. Chapter 8. The list of
readings Required readings
Bellami R. ‘The Making of Modern Citizenship’ – Bellami R.,
Castiglione D., Santoro E. (eds.). Lineages of European
Citizenship. Rights, Belonging and Participation in Eleven
Nation-States. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. P. 3-19.
Clark C. ‘The Nation-state, civic and ethnic dimensions.’ –
Cordell K., Wolff S. (eds.). Routledge Handbook of Ethnic Conflict.
New York: Routledge, 2011.
Eatwell R. ‘The rebirth of the ‘extreme right’ in Western
Europe?’ – Parliamentary Affairs. Vol. 53 (2000). P. 410-424.
Gellner E. Nations and Nationalism. Oxford: Basil Blackwell,
1983. Hechter M. Containing Nationalism. Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2000. Kaldor M. ‘Nationalism and Globalisation.’ – Nations
and Nationalism. Vol. 10 (2004),
no. 1-2. P. 161-176. McCrone D. The Sociology of Nationalism.
London: Routledge, 1998. Phinney J. S. ‘Identity Formation across
Cultures: The Interaction of Personal, Societal,
and Historical Change.’ – Human Development. Vol. 43, 2000. P.
27–31. Phinney J. S. ‘Bridging identities and disciplines: Advances
and challenges in
understanding multiple identities.’ – Azmitia M., Syed M.,
Radmacher K. (eds.), The intersections of personal and social
identities. New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development.
Vol. 120, 2008. P. 97–109.
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Sidanius J., Haley H., Molina L., Pratto F. ‘Vladimir;s Choice
and the Distribution of Social Resources: A Group Dominance
Perspective’ – Group Processes & Intergroup Relations. Vol. 10,
2007, no. 2, p. 257-265.
Smith A.D. National Identity. London: Penguin Books, 1991. Smith
A. The Nation in History. Historiographical Debates about Ethnicity
and
Nationalism. Cambridge: Polity Press, 2000. Smith A.D.
Nationalism: Theory, Ideology, History. Cambridge: Polity Press,
2001. Wilson R. ‘The politics of contemporary ethno-nationalist
conflicts.’ – Nations and
Nationalism. Vol. 7 (2001), no. 3. P. 365-381. Wimmer A. ‘Who
owns the state? Understanding ethnic conflict in post-colonial
societies.’
– Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 3 (1997), no. 4. P. 635-653.
Suggested readings
Anderson B. Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and
Spread of Nationalism. Revised edition. London: Verso, 2006.
Ariely G. ‘Globalisation and the decline of national identity?
An exploration across sixty-three counties.’ – Nations and
Nationalism. Vol. 18 (2012), no. 3. P. 461-482
Armstrong J.A. Nations before Nationalism. Chapel Hill, NC:
University of North Carolina Press, 1982.
Armstrong J.A. ‘Definitions, periodization, and prospects for
the ‘long durée’.’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 10 (2004), no.
1-2. P. 9-18.
Beissinger M.R. Nationalist Mobilization and the Collapse of the
Soviet Union. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004.
Billig M. ‘Henri Tajfel’s ‘Cognitive aspects of prejudice’ and
the psychology of bigotry’ – British Journal of Social Psychology.
Vol. 41, 2002. P. 171-178.
Boli J. ‘Sovereignty from a World Policy Perspective’ – Krasner
S.D. (ed.). Problematic Sovereignty. Contested Rules and Political
Possibilities. New York: Columbia University Press, 2001. P.
53-82.
Brass P.L. ‘Introduction. Discourses on Ethnicity, Communalism,
and Violence.’ – Brass P.L. (ed.). Riots and Pogroms. London:
Macmillan Press, 1996. P. 1-55.
Breuilly J. Nationalism and the State. 2nd ed. Manchester:
Manchester University Press, 1993.
Brown D. ‘Why is the nation-state so vulnerable to ethnic
nationalism?’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 4 (1998), no.1. P.
1-15.
Brownlee J. ‘Can America Nation-Build?’ – World Politics. Vol.
59, no. 2 (2007). P. 314-340.
Brubaker R. Citizenship and Nationhood in France and Germany.
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1994.
Brubaker R. ‘Myths and Misconceptions in the Study of
Nationalism.’ – Moore M. (ed.). National Self-Determination and
Secession. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998. P. 233-265.
Cederman L.E., Girardin L., Gleditsch K.S. ‘Ethnonationalist
triads. Assessing the
-
Influence of Kin Groups on Civil Wars.’ – World Politics. Vol.
61 (2009), no. 3. P. 403-37. Cederman L.E., Weideman N.B.,
Gleditsch K.S. ‘Horizontal Inequalities and
Ethnonationalist Civil War: A Global Comparison.’ – American
Political Science Review. Vol. 105 (2011), no. 3. P. 478-495.
Chatteijee P. ‘Whose Imagined Community?’ – Balakrishnan
G.(ed.). Mapping the Nation. London: Verso, 1996. P. 214-225.
Connor W. ‘The Timelessness of Nations.’ – Nations and
Nationalism. Vol. 10 (2004), no. 1-2. P. 35-48.
Cram L. ‘Identity and European integration: diversity as the
source of integration.’ – Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 15 (2009),
no.1. P. 109-128.
Croucher S.L. Globalization and Belonging. The Politics of
Identity in a Changing World. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield
Publishers, 2004.
Cruz C. ‘Identity and Persuasion: How Nations Remember their
Past and Make their Futures.’ – World Politics. Vol. 52 (2000), no.
3. P. 275-312.
Dalle Mulle E. The Nationalism of the Rich. Discourses and
Strategies of Separatist Parties in Catalonia, Flanders, Northern
Italy and Scotland. London: Routledge, 2018.
Darden K., Grzymała-Busse A. ‘The Great Divide: Literacy,
Nationalism, and the Communist Collapse,’ World Politics. Vol. 59
(2006), no.1. P. 83-115.
Duerr G.M.E. Secessionism and the European Union. The Future of
Flanders, Scotland, and Catalonia. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books,
2015.
van Evera S. ‘Hypotheses on Nationalism and War.’ –
International Security. Vol. 18, no. 4 (1994). P. 5-39.
Finer S.E. The History of Government From the Earliest Times.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997.
Fukuyama F. The Origins of Political Order. From Prehuman Times
to the French Revolution. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
2011.
Ghani A., Lockhart C. Fixing Failed State. A Framework of
Rebuilding a Fractured World. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
2008.
Götz I. ‘The rediscovery of ‘the national’ in the 1990s –
contexts, new cultural forms and practices in reunified Germany.’ –
Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 22 (2016), no.4. P. 803-823.
Habermas J. ‘The European Nation-state—Its Achievements and Its
Limits’ – Mapping the Nation. London: Verso, 1996.
Halikiopoulou D., Mock S., Vasilopoulou S. ‘The civic zeitgeist:
nationalism and liberal values in the European radical right.’ –
Nations and Nationalism. Vol. 19 (2013), no.1. C. 107-127.
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Nationalism and Nation-Building 1,2 pagesNationalism and
Nation-Building oldPART 1:1.1 General information1.2 Course aims
and learning outcomesLearning outcomes1.3 Course requirements and
grading planGrading planPART 2. COURSE CONTENTSuggested
readings:Suggested readings:2. Croucher S.L. Globalization and
Belonging. The Politics of Identity in a Changing World. Lanham,
MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2004.Suggested
readings:Suggested readingsCroucher S.L. Globalization and
Belonging. The Politics of Identity in a Changing World. Lanham,
MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2004.