This article argues for dissolving the civic–ethnic dichotomy into several analytical dimensions and suggests ‘autochthony’ and 'activism’ as two such alternatives. It does so by first presenting a case study of Irish language revivalism and identity discourses in the North of Ireland, in which locals turn out to be both ‘civic’ nationalists and ‘ethno’-cultural revivalists. The article then advocates treating these aspects as belonging to two distinct dimensions: the first is concerned with the causal logic underlying the reproduction of nationhood in terms of autochthony, while the second specifies different forms of activism aimed at (re)constituting the nation. Finally, reinterpreting the empirical case in terms of these two dimensions,...
This article argues that nationalism is more varied in the way that it constructs its boundaries th...
This thesis seeks to delineate what change in divided societies such as Northern Ireland is possible...
Arthur (1996, p. 1) suggests that literature on solutions to the Northern Irish “problem” could “spa...
The concept of ‘Ethnicity’ still enjoys some currency in the historical and social science literatur...
ABSTRACT This article argues that nationalism is more varied in the way that it constructs its bound...
Despite consistent efforts to counteract those attitudes and practices that give rise to it, most pu...
ABSTRACT This article argues that nationalism is more varied in the way that it constructs its bound...
According to Yack (1996), “I am sceptical about this familiar contrast between civic and ethnic nati...
This essay examines the narrative source of Irish Republican ideology. By contrasting the nationali...
The conventional understanding of the nation within social psychology is as a category of people or ...
International audienceThis article is based on the premise that Ireland's main political ideologies,...
How does political structure affect ethno-national distinction? Partitioned societies are a good tes...
The rise of the populist right in the West is emerging as the most discussed manifestation of nation...
This article poses a number of questions: Is nationalism an ideology, a philosophy, an epistemology ...
Nation and nationalism are two referents which continue to play a major role in how politics and soc...
This article argues that nationalism is more varied in the way that it constructs its boundaries th...
This thesis seeks to delineate what change in divided societies such as Northern Ireland is possible...
Arthur (1996, p. 1) suggests that literature on solutions to the Northern Irish “problem” could “spa...
The concept of ‘Ethnicity’ still enjoys some currency in the historical and social science literatur...
ABSTRACT This article argues that nationalism is more varied in the way that it constructs its bound...
Despite consistent efforts to counteract those attitudes and practices that give rise to it, most pu...
ABSTRACT This article argues that nationalism is more varied in the way that it constructs its bound...
According to Yack (1996), “I am sceptical about this familiar contrast between civic and ethnic nati...
This essay examines the narrative source of Irish Republican ideology. By contrasting the nationali...
The conventional understanding of the nation within social psychology is as a category of people or ...
International audienceThis article is based on the premise that Ireland's main political ideologies,...
How does political structure affect ethno-national distinction? Partitioned societies are a good tes...
The rise of the populist right in the West is emerging as the most discussed manifestation of nation...
This article poses a number of questions: Is nationalism an ideology, a philosophy, an epistemology ...
Nation and nationalism are two referents which continue to play a major role in how politics and soc...
This article argues that nationalism is more varied in the way that it constructs its boundaries th...
This thesis seeks to delineate what change in divided societies such as Northern Ireland is possible...
Arthur (1996, p. 1) suggests that literature on solutions to the Northern Irish “problem” could “spa...