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ID095455
Title ProperCivic-secular and ethnic nationalisms as bases of the nation-state
Other Title Informationmulticulturalism at the crossroads?
LanguageENG
AuthorMukherji, Partha Nath
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The dominant Eurocentric paradigm of the nation and the nation-state was premised on western historical experience that was indigenous to the west but claimed universality for the rest. Many post-colonial countries, particularly those that went through national liberation struggles, like India and China, with multi-ethnic mobilisations, established sovereign states. The nationalist leaders claimed the unity of nationhood for their culturally diverse countries (states), with their millennia-deep civilisational identity, compelling a new discourse on the untenability of the classic Eurocentric paradigm. The second development witnessed the inevitable cultural heterogenisation of the western countries premised on the expansion of the (immigrant) labour market through an ever-enveloping regime of economic liberalisation and world trade. The catharsis of the invasion of cheaper labour from culturally diverse countries, often native-displacing, resulted in western countries attempting to accommodate the emerging changing reality in the context of mono-cultural nations through the concept and policy of multiculturalism. In spite of this, western countries have been witness to intercultural violence, racial discrimination and threats of home grown terrorism. The paper seeks to distinguish between 'pluralism' and 'multiculturalism' and argues for a reformulation of the concept of the nation-state that will have greater applicability across states.
`In' analytical NoteAsian Ethinicity Vol. 11, No. 1; Feb 2010: p.1 - 23
Journal SourceAsian Ethinicity Vol. 11, No. 1; Feb 2010: p.1 - 23
Key WordsNation ;  Nation - State ;  Ethnicity ;  Pluralism ;  Multiculturalism


 
 
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