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Original scientific paper

Power and Ethnonationalism

Vjeran Katunarić ; Department of Sociology, Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia


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page 209-224

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Abstract

The fact that modern development does not diminish the importance of ethnonational identity and conflict and the creation of nation-states is explained as an effect of the two-fold action of modern elites, both of the liberal and bolshevik type. The first (i.e. liberal) pattern seeks a universalistic form of legitimization, and it is based on the expansion of economic and (military-)political power in international dimensions: via the world market and (military-)political alliances. This pattern is chronically unstable due to cyclical economic crises and political tension and conflicts. The second pattern is particularistic and based on a deep-level fusion of the power and prestige of elites with local collective memberships and facets of meaning such as ethnonational identity and the nation-state. This pattern of power is more reliable and “familiar”, and it more easily withstands economic and political convulsions brought about by domestic and foreign actors. Therefore, ethnonational corporatism constitutes a framework for contemporary and probably for future (dis)integrative processes, or rather zig-zag movements in the power systems of Western and non-Western societies.

Keywords

power; ethnonationalism; nation-state

Hrčak ID:

127112

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/127112

Publication date:

30.12.1994.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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