′Overall, I would warmly recommend this book to students and scholars working in the areas of nationalism, ethnic politics, European integration and the social and political sciences in general. It offers an excellent example of how theory and empirical research can be combined in the most fruitful way.′
Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Introduction.
1. State and Nation.
2. Nations without States: different political scenarios.
3. Nations and Nationalism in Native America.
4. Nationalism as a Social Movement.
5. Cultural Resistance and Political Violence.
6. Nations without States as New Global Political Actors.
7. Conclusion.
Notes.
Bibliography.
Index.
Montserrat Guibernau is a lecturer in Government and Politics at the Open University.
Nations without states – where there is a strong sense of national identity, but no state – are common. They have a new importance today, when established nation–states are changing their nature in response to globalization. This book provides a comprehensive analysis of Western substate nationalism by drawing on a wide range of case studies which include Catalonia, Scotland, Wales, the Basque Country, Northern Ireland, Quebec and Indian nations in North America.
Drawing on a comparative framework, in which both the nature of nationalist movements and the state containing them are studied, the book offers a typology of the different political scenarios in which substate nationalism emerges and develops, ranging from cultural recognition to federation.
Guibernau offers a comparative analysis of nationalist movements in nations without states and considers cultural resistance and political terrorism as strategies currently employed by some of these nations to attain their goals. The future shape of the nation–state and the conditions for the success of alternative structures, such as those prompted by substate nationalist movements, lie at the core of the book.
Nations without States will be essential reading for students and professionals in sociology, politics and international relations.