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Original scientific paper

Liberal Nationalism: The Autonomy Argument

Elvio Baccarini ; Faculty of Arts, University of Rijeka, Rijeka, Croatia


Full text: croatian pdf 468 Kb

page 153-179

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Abstract

Must liberalism, in dealing with issues of basic rights and primary goods, take into account national belonging as a particularly important form of cultural belonging? The paper first discusses liberalism which is frequently defined as difference-blind and which considers citizens solely on the basis of some of their abstract and common features. The alternative position is liberal nationalism, according to which individuals and their primary goods stand at the center of considerations of justice, but which also finds it impossible to ignore cultural belonging (more precisely, national belonging) when discussing primary goods and basic rights of individuals. In discussing the strategy which affirms national cultural belonging as a precondition for autonomy, an attempt is made to show that this is not a sufficient basis for the role of a special national cultural belonging in the definition of primary goods, because even if a national cultural belonging is needed for practicing autonomy, specific national cultural belonging isn’t.

Keywords

Autonomy; Kymlicka; liberalism; nationalism; primary goods

Hrčak ID:

29219

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/29219

Publication date:

26.11.2008.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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