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A nation state is a political unit where the state and nation are congruent. It is a more precise concept than "country", since a country does not need to have a predominant ethnic group.
A nation, in the sense of a common ethnicity, may include a diaspora or refugees
who live outside the nation state; some nations of this sense do not
have a state where that ethnicity predominates. In a more general sense,
a nation state is simply a large, politically sovereign country or
administrative territory. A nation state may be contrasted with:
- A multinational state, where no one ethnic group dominates (such a state may also be considered a multicultural state depending on the degree of cultural assimilation of various groups).
- A city-state,
which is both smaller than a "nation" in the sense of "large sovereign
country" and which may or may not be dominated by all or part of a
single "nation" in the sense of a common ethnicity.
- An empire, which is composed of many countries (possibly non-sovereign states) and nations under a single monarch or ruling state government.
- A confederation, a league of sovereign states, which might or might not include nation-states.
- A federated state, which may or may not be a nation-state, and which is only partially self-governing within a larger federation (for example, the state boundaries of Bosnia and Herzegovina are drawn along ethnic lines, but those of the United States are not).
This article mainly discusses the more specific definition of a
nation-state as a typically sovereign country dominated by a particular
ethnicity.
Complexity
The relationship between a nation (in the ethnic sense) and a state can be complex. The presence of a state can encourage ethnogenesis, and a group with a pre-existing ethnic identity can influence the drawing of territorial boundaries or argue for political legitimacy.
This definition of a "nation-state" is not universally accepted.
"All attempts to develop terminological consensus around "nation"
resulted in failure", concludes academic Valery Tishkov.
Walker Connor discusses the impressions surrounding the characters of "nation", "(sovereign) state", "nation state", and "nationalism". Connor, who gave the term "ethnonationalism" wide currency, also discusses the tendency to confuse nation and state and the treatment of all states as if nation states.
History and origins
The origins and early history
of nation states are disputed. A major theoretical question is: "Which
came first, the nation or the nation state?" Scholars such as Steven Weber, David Woodward, Michel Foucault and Jeremy Black
have advanced the hypothesis that the nation state did not arise out of
political ingenuity or an unknown undetermined source, nor was it a
political invention; but is an inadvertent byproduct of 15th-century
intellectual discoveries in political economy, capitalism, mercantilism, political geography, and geography combined with cartography and advances in map-making technologies.
It was with these intellectual discoveries and technological advances
that the nation state arose. For others, the nation existed first, then
nationalist movements arose for sovereignty, and the nation state was created to meet that demand. Some "modernization theories"
of nationalism see it as a product of government policies to unify and
modernize an already existing state. Most theories see the nation state
as a 19th-century European phenomenon, facilitated by developments such
as state-mandated education, mass literacy and mass media. However, historians also note the early emergence of a relatively unified state and identity in Portugal and the Dutch Republic.
In France, Eric Hobsbawm argues, the French state preceded the formation of the French people. Hobsbawm considers that the state made the French nation, not French nationalism, which emerged at the end of the 19th century, the time of the Dreyfus Affair. At the time of the 1789 French Revolution,
only half of the French people spoke some French, and 12–13% spoke the
version of it that was to be found in literature and in educational
facilities, according to Hobsbawm.
During the Italian unification, the number of people speaking the Italian language was even lower. The French state promoted the replacement of various regional dialects and languages by a centralised French language, and so did, and still does, Italy. The introduction of conscription and the Third Republic's 1880s laws on public instruction facilitated the creation of a national identity under this theory.
The
Revolutions of 1848 were democratic and liberal in nature, with the aim of removing the old
monarchical structures and creating independent nation-states.
Some nation states, such as Germany and Italy, came into existence at least partly as a result of political campaigns by nationalists,
during the 19th century. In both cases, the territory was previously
divided among other states, some of them very small. The sense of common
identity was at first a cultural movement, such as in the Völkisch movement
in German-speaking states, which rapidly acquired a political
significance. In these cases, the nationalist sentiment and the
nationalist movement clearly precede the unification of the German and
Italian nation states.
Historians Hans Kohn, Liah Greenfeld, Philip White and others
have classified nations such as Germany or Italy, where cultural
unification preceded state unification, as ethnic nations or ethnic nationalities.
However, "state-driven" national unifications, such as in France,
England or China, are more likely to flourish in multiethnic societies,
producing a traditional national heritage of civic nations, or territory-based nationalities.
The idea of a nation state was and is associated with the rise of the modern system of states, often called the "Westphalian system" in reference to the Treaty of Westphalia (1648). The balance of power,
which characterized that system, depended on its effectiveness upon
clearly defined, centrally controlled, independent entities, whether empires
or nation states, which recognize each other's sovereignty and
territory. The Westphalian system did not create the nation state, but
the nation state meets the criteria for its component states (by
assuming that there is no disputed territory).
Before the Westphalian system, the closest geopolitical system was the
"Chanyuan system" established in East Asia in 1005 through the Treaty of Chanyuan, which, like the Westphalian peace treaties, designated national borders between the independent regimes of China's Song dynasty and the nomadic Liao dynasty. This system was copied and developed in East Asia in the following centuries until the establishment of the pan-Eurasian Mongol Empire in the 13th century.
The nation state received a philosophical underpinning in the era of Romanticism, at first as the "natural" expression of the individual peoples (romantic nationalism: see Johann Gottlieb Fichte's conception of the Volk, later opposed by Ernest Renan).
The increasing emphasis during the 19th century on the ethnic and
racial origins of the nation, led to a redefinition of the nation state
in these terms. Racism, which in Boulainvilliers's theories was inherently antipatriotic and antinationalist, joined itself with colonialist imperialism and "continental imperialism", most notably in pan-Germanic and pan-Slavic movements.
The relation between racism and ethnic nationalism reached its height in the 20th century fascism and Nazism. The specific combination of "nation" ("people") and "state" expressed in such terms as the Völkische Staat and implemented in laws such as the 1935 Nuremberg laws made fascist states such as early Nazi Germany qualitatively different from non-fascist nation states. Minorities were not considered part of the people (Volk), and were consequently denied to have an authentic or legitimate role in such a state. In Germany, neither Jews nor the Roma were considered part of the people and both were specifically targeted for persecution. German nationality law defined "German" on the basis of German ancestry, excluding all non-Germans from the people.
In recent years, a nation state's claim to absolute sovereignty within its borders has been criticized. A global political system based on international agreements and supra-national blocs characterized the post-war era. Non-state actors, such as international corporations and non-governmental organizations, are widely seen as eroding the economic and political power of nation states.
According to Andreas Wimmer and Yuval Feinstein, nation-states
tended to emerge when power shifts allowed nationalists to overthrow
existing regimes or absorb existing administrative units.
Xue Li and Alexander Hicks links the frequency of nation-state creation
to processes of diffusion that emanate from international
organizations.
Before the nation state
In Europe, during the 18th century, the classic non-national states were the multiethnic empires, the Austrian Empire, the Kingdom of France (and its empire), the Kingdom of Hungary, the Russian Empire, the Portuguese Empire, the Spanish Empire, the Ottoman Empire, the British Empire, the Dutch Empire and smaller nations at what would now be called sub-state level. The multi-ethnic empire was an absolute monarchy ruled by a king, emperor or sultan.
The population belonged to many ethnic groups, and they spoke many
languages. The empire was dominated by one ethnic group, and their
language was usually the language of public administration. The ruling dynasty was usually, but not always, from that group.
This type of state is not specifically European: such empires
existed in Asia, Africa and the Americas. Chinese dynasties, such as the
Tang dynasty, the Ming dynasty, and the Qing dynasty, were all multiethnic regimes governed by a ruling ethnic group. In the three examples, their ruling ethnic groups were the Turks, the Han-Chinese, and the Manchus, respectively. In the Muslim world, immediately after Muhammad's death in 632, Caliphates were established. Caliphates were Islamic states under the leadership of a political-religious successor to the Islamic prophet Muhammad. These polities developed into multi-ethnic trans-national empires. The Ottoman sultan, Selim I
(1512–1520) reclaimed the title of caliph, which had been in dispute
and asserted by a diversity of rulers and "shadow caliphs" in the
centuries of the Abbasid-Mamluk Caliphate since the Mongols' sacking of Baghdad and the killing of the last Abbasid Caliph in Baghdad, Iraq 1258.
The Ottoman Caliphate as an office of the Ottoman Empire was abolished under Mustafa Kemal Atatürk in 1924 as part of Atatürk's Reforms.
Some of the smaller European states were not so ethnically diverse, but were also dynastic states, ruled by a royal house. Their territory could expand by royal intermarriage or merge with another state when the dynasty merged. In some parts of Europe, notably Germany,
very small territorial units existed. They were recognized by their
neighbors as independent, and had their own government and laws. Some
were ruled by princes or other hereditary rulers, some were governed by bishops or abbots.
Because they were so small, however, they had no separate language or
culture: the inhabitants shared the language of the surrounding region.
In some cases, these states were simply overthrown by nationalist uprisings in the 19th century. Liberal ideas of free trade played a role in German unification, which was preceded by a customs union, the Zollverein. However, the Austro-Prussian War, and the German alliances in the Franco-Prussian War, were decisive in the unification. The Austro-Hungarian Empire and the Ottoman Empire broke up after the First World War, and the Russian Empire became the Soviet Union after the Russian Civil War.
A few of the smaller states survived: the independent principalities of Liechtenstein, Andorra, Monaco, and the republic of San Marino. (Vatican City is a special case. All of the larger Papal States save the Vatican itself were occupied and absorbed by Italy by 1870. The resulting Roman Question was resolved with the rise of the modern state under the 1929 Lateran treaties between Italy and the Holy See.)
Characteristics
"Legitimate states that govern effectively and dynamic industrial
economies are widely regarded today as the defining characteristics of a
modern nation-state."
Nation states have their own characteristics, differing from
those of the pre-national states. For a start, they have a different
attitude to their territory when compared with dynastic monarchies: it
is semisacred and nontransferable. No nation would swap territory with
other states simply, for example, because the king's daughter married.
They have a different type of border,
in principle defined only by the area of settlement of the national
group, although many nation states also sought natural borders (rivers,
mountain ranges). They are constantly changing in population size and
power because of the limited restrictions of their borders.
The most noticeable characteristic is the degree to which nation
states use the state as an instrument of national unity, in economic,
social and cultural life.
The nation state promoted economic unity, by abolishing internal customs and tolls. In Germany, that process, the creation of the Zollverein,
preceded formal national unity. Nation states typically have a policy
to create and maintain a national transportation infrastructure,
facilitating trade and travel. In 19th-century Europe, the expansion of
the rail transport networks was at first largely a matter for private
railway companies, but gradually came under control of the national
governments. The French rail network, with its main lines radiating from
Paris to all corners of France, is often seen as a reflection of the
centralised French nation state, which directed its construction. Nation states continue to build, for instance, specifically national motorway networks. Specifically transnational infrastructure programmes, such as the Trans-European Networks, are a recent innovation.
The nation states typically had a more centralised and uniform public administration than its imperial predecessors: they were smaller, and the population less diverse. (The internal diversity of the Ottoman Empire,
for instance, was very great.) After the 19th-century triumph of the
nation state in Europe, regional identity was subordinate to national
identity, in regions such as Alsace-Lorraine, Catalonia, Brittany and Corsica.
In many cases, the regional administration was also subordinated to
central (national) government. This process was partially reversed from
the 1970s onward, with the introduction of various forms of regional autonomy, in formerly centralised states such as Spain or Italy.
The most obvious impact of the nation state, as compared to its
non-national predecessors, is the creation of a uniform national culture, through state policy. The model of the nation state implies that its population constitutes a nation,
united by a common descent, a common language and many forms of shared
culture. When the implied unity was absent, the nation state often tried
to create it. It promoted a uniform national language, through language policy. The creation of national systems of compulsory primary education and a relatively uniform curriculum in secondary schools, was the most effective instrument in the spread of the national languages. The schools also taught the national history, often in a propagandistic and mythologised version, and (especially during conflicts) some nation states still teach this kind of history.
Language and cultural policy was sometimes negative, aimed at the suppression of non-national elements. Language prohibitions were sometimes used to accelerate the adoption of national languages and the decline of minority languages (see examples: Anglicisation, Bulgarization, Croatization, Czechization, Dutchification, Francisation, Germanisation, Hellenization, Hispanicization, Italianization, Lithuanization, Magyarisation, Polonisation, Russification, Serbization, Slovakisation, Swedification, Turkification).
In some cases, these policies triggered bitter conflicts and further ethnic separatism.
But where it worked, the cultural uniformity and homogeneity of the
population increased. Conversely, the cultural divergence at the border
became sharper: in theory, a uniform French identity extends from the
Atlantic coast to the Rhine, and on the other bank of the Rhine, a uniform German identity begins. To enforce that model, both sides have divergent language policy and educational systems.
In practice
The notion of a unifying "national identity" also extends to countries that host multiple ethnic or language groups, such as India. For example, Switzerland is constitutionally a confederation of cantons, and has four official languages, but it has also a "Swiss" national identity, a national history and a classic national hero, Wilhelm Tell.
Innumerable conflicts have arisen where political boundaries did not correspond with ethnic or cultural boundaries.
After World War II in the Josip Broz Tito era, nationalism was appealed to for uniting South Slav
peoples. Later in the 20th century, after the break-up of the Soviet
Union, leaders appealed to ancient ethnic feuds or tensions that ignited
conflict between the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, as well as Bosniaks, Montenegrins and Macedonians,
eventually breaking up the long collaboration of peoples. Ethnic
cleansing was carried out in the Balkans, resulting in the destruction
of the formerly socialist republic and producing the civil wars in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina
in 1992–95, resulting in mass population displacements and segregation
that radically altered what was once a highly diverse and intermixed
ethnic makeup of the region. These conflicts were largely about creating
a new political framework of states, each of which would be ethnically
and politically homogeneous. Serbs, Croats and Bosniaks insisted they
were ethnically distinct although many communities had a long history of
intermarriage. Presently Croatia (90,42%), Slovenia (83,1-88%) and Serbia (83,3% Serb) could be classified as monoethnic states, whereas North Macedonia (66% Macedonian), Montenegro (42% Montenegrin) and Bosnia and Herzegovina (50.1% Bosniak) are multiethnic states.
Belgium is a classic example of a state that is not a nation state. The state was formed by secession from the United Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1830, whose neutrality and integrity was protected by the Treaty of London 1839; thus it served as a buffer state after the Napoleonic Wars between the European powers France, Prussia (after 1871 the German Empire) and the United Kingdom until World War I, when its neutrality was breached by the Germans. Currently, Belgium is divided between the Flemings in the north, the French-speaking population in the south, and the German-speaking population in the east. The Flemish population in the north speaks Dutch, the Walloon population in the south speaks either French or, in the east of Liège Province, German. The Brussels population speaks French or Dutch.
The Flemish identity is also cultural, and there is a strong
separatist movement espoused by the political parties, the right-wing Vlaams Belang and the Nieuw-Vlaamse Alliantie. The Francophone Walloon identity of Belgium is linguistically distinct and regionalist. There is also unitary Belgian nationalism, several versions of a Greater Netherlands ideal, and a German-speaking community of Belgium annexed from Germany
in 1920, and re-annexed by Germany in 1940–1944. However, these
ideologies are all very marginal and politically insignificant during
elections.
Ethnolinguistic map of mainland China and Taiwan
China covers a large geographic area and uses the concept of "Zhonghua minzu" or Chinese nationality, in the sense of ethnic groups, but it also officially recognizes the majority Han ethnic group which accounts for over 90% of the population, and no fewer than 55 ethnic national minorities.
According to Philip G. Roeder, Moldova is an example of a Soviet era "segment-state" (Moldavian SSR),
where the "nation-state project of the segment-state trumped the
nation-state project of prior statehood. In Moldova, despite strong
agitation from university faculty and students for reunification with Romania,
the nation-state project forged within the Moldavian SSR trumped the
project for a return to the interwar nation-state project of Greater Romania." See Controversy over linguistic and ethnic identity in Moldova for further details.
Exceptional cases
Israel
Israel was founded as a Jewish state in 1948. Its "Basic Laws" describe it as both a Jewish and a democratic state. The Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People (2018) explicitly specifies the nature of the State of Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people. According to the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics, 75.7% of Israel's population are Jews. Arabs, who make up 20.4% of the population, are the largest ethnic minority in Israel. Israel also has very small communities of Armenians, Circassians, Assyrians, Samaritans.
There are also some non-Jewish spouses of Israeli Jews. However, these
communities are very small, and usually number only in the hundreds or
thousands.
Kingdom of the Netherlands
The Kingdom of the Netherlands
presents an unusual example in which one kingdom represents four
distinct countries. The four countries of the Kingdom of the Netherlands
are:
Each is expressly designated as a land in Dutch law by the Charter for the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Unlike the German Länder and the Austrian Bundesländer, landen is consistently translated as "countries" by the Dutch government.
Pakistan
Pakistan, even being an ethnically diverse country and officially a federation, is regarded as a nation state due to its ideological basis on which it was given independence from British India as a separate nation rather than as part of a unified India. Different ethnic groups in Pakistan are strongly bonded by their common Muslim identity, common cultural and social values, common historical heritage, a national lingua franca (Urdu) and joint political, strategic and economic interests.
Spain
While
historical monarchies often brought together different
kingdoms/territories/ethnic groups under the same crown, in modern
nation states political elites seek a uniformity of the population,
leading to state nationalism. In the case of the Christian territories of the future Spain, neighboring Al-Andalus,
there was an early perception of ethnicity, faith and shared territory
in the Middle Ages (13th-14th centuries), as documented by the Chronicle of Muntaner in the proposal of the Castilian king to the other Christian kings of the peninsula: "...if
these four Kings of Spain whom he named, who are of one flesh and
blood, held together, little need they fear all the other powers of the
world...". After the dynastic union of the Catholic Monarchs
in the 15th century, the Spanish Monarchy ruled over different
kingdoms, each with its own cultural, linguistic and political
particularities, and the kings had to swear by the Laws of each territory before the respective Parliaments.
After the War of the Spanish Succession, rooted in the political position of the Count-Duke of Olivares and the absolutism of Philip V, the assimilation of the Crown of Aragon by the Castilian Crown through the Decrees of Nova planta
was the first step in the creation of the Spanish nation-state. As in
other contemporary European states, political union was the first step
in the creation of the Spanish nation-state, in this case not on a
uniform ethnic
basis, but through the imposition of the political and cultural
characteristics of the dominant ethnic group, in this case the
Castilians, over those of other ethnic groups, who became national minorities to be assimilated. In fact, since the political unification of 1714, Spanish assimilation policies towards Catalan-speaking territories (Catalonia, Valencia, the Balearic Islands, part of Aragon) and other national minorities have been a historical constant.
School
map of Spain from 1850. On it, the State is shown divided into four
parts:- "Fully constitutional Spain", which includes Castile and
Andalusia, but also the Galician-speaking territories. - "Annexed or
assimilated Spain": the territories of the Crown of Aragon, the larger
part of which, with the exception of Aragon proper, are
Catalan-speaking-, "Foral Spain", which includes Basque-speaking
territories-, and "Colonial Spain", with the last overseas colonial
territories.
The process of assimilation began with secret instructions to the
corregidores of the Catalan territory: they "will take the utmost care
to introduce the Castilian language, for which purpose he will give the
most temperate and disguised measures so that the effect is achieved,
without the care being noticed."
From there, actions in the service of assimilation, discreet or
aggressive, were continued, and reached to the last detail, such as, in
1799, the Royal Certificate forbidding anyone to "represent, sing and
dance pieces that were not in Spanish." These nationalist policies, sometimes very aggressive, and still in force, have been, and still are, the seed of repeated territorial conflicts within the State.
The nationalization process accelerated in the 19th century, in parallel to the origin of Spanish nationalism,
the social, political and ideological movement that tried to shape a
Spanish national identity based on the Castilian model, in conflict with
the other historical nations of the State. Politicians of the time were
aware that despite the aggressive policies pursued up to that time, the
uniform and monocultural "Spanish nation" did not exist, as indicated
in 1835 by Antonio Alcalà Galiano, when in the Cortes del Estatuto Real he defended the effort
"To make the Spanish nation a nation that neither is nor has been until now."
In 1906, the Catalanist party Solidaritat Catalana
was founded to try to mitigate the economically and culturally
oppressive treatment of Spain towards the Catalans. One of the
responses of Spanish nationalism came from the military state with statements such as that of the publication La Correspondencia militar:
"The Catalan problem is not solved, well, by freedom, but by
restriction; not by palliatives and pacts, but by iron and fire".
Another came from important Spanish intellectuals, such Pio Baroja and Blasco Ibañez, calling the Catalans "Jews", considered a serious insult at that time when racism was gaining strength.
Building the nation (as in France,
it was the state that created the nation, and not the opposite process)
is an ideal that the Spanish elites constantly reiterated, and, one
hundred years later than Alcalá Galiano, for example, we can also find
it in the mouth of the fascist José Pemartín, who admired the German and Italian modeling policies:
"There
is an intimate and decisive dualism, both in Italian fascism and in
German National Socialism. On the one hand the Hegelian doctrine of the
absolutism of the state is felt. The State originates in the Nation,
educates and shapes the mentality of the individual; is, in Mussolini's
words, the soul of the soul »
The turn of the 20th
century, and the first half of that century, have seen the most ethnic
violence, coinciding with a racism that even came to identify states
with races; in the case of Spain, with a supposed Spanish race
sublimated in Castilian, of which national minorities were degenerate
forms, and the first of those that needed to be exterminated.
In this sense, one can find discourses on the alienation of Catalan speakers, such as, for example, an article entitled «Cataluña bilingüe», by Menéndez Pidal, in which he defends the Romanones decree against the Catalan language, published in El Imparcial, on 15 December 1902:
«…
There they will see that the Courts of the Catalan-Aragonese
Confederation never had Catalan as their official language; that the
kings of Aragon, even those of the Catalan dynasty, used Catalan only in
Catalonia, and used Spanish not only in the Cortes of Aragon, but also
in foreign relations, the same with Castile or Navarre as with the
infidel kings of Granada , from Africa or Asia, because even in the most
important days of Catalonia, Spanish prevailed as the language of the
Aragonese kingdom and Catalan was reserved for the peculiar affairs of
the Catalan county..."
or the article "Los Catalanes. A las Cortes Constituyentes », appeared in several newspapers, among others: El Dia de Alicante, June 23, 1931, El Porvenir Castellano and El Noticiero de Soria, July 2, 1931, in the Heraldo de Almeria on June 4, 1931, sent by the "Pro-Justice Committee", with a post office box in Madrid:
"The
Catalanists have recently declared that they are not Spanish, nor do
they want to be, nor can they be. They have also been saying for a long
time that they are an oppressed, enslaved, exploited people. It is
imperative to do them justice... That they return to Phenicia or that
they go wherever they want to admit them. When the Catalan tribes saw
Spain and settled in the Spanish territory that is now occupied by the
provinces of Barcelona, Gerona, Lérida and Tarragona, how little they
imagined that the case of the captivity of the tribes of Israel in Egypt
would be repeated there! !... Let us respect his most holy will. They
are eternally inadaptable... Their cowardice and selfishness leaves them
no room for fraternity... So, we propose to the Constituent Cortes the
expulsion of the Catalanists... You are free! The Republic opens wide
the doors of Spain, your prison. go away Get out of here. Go back to
Phenicia, or go wherever you want, how big is the world."
The
main scapegoat of Spanish nationalism is the non-Spanish languages,
which over the last three hundred years have been tried to be replaced
by Spanish with hundreds of laws and regulations, but also with acts of great violence, such as during the civil war. For example, the statements of Queipo de Llano can be found in the article entitled "Against Catalonia, the Israel of the Modern World", published in the Diario Palentino on November 26, 1936, where it is dropped that in America Catalans are considered a race of Jews, because they use the same procedures that the Hebrews perform in all the nations of the Globe. And considering the Catalans as Hebrews and considering his anti-Semitism
"Our struggle is not a civil war, but a war for Western civilization
against the Jewish world," it is not surprising that Queipo de Llano
expressed his anti-Catalan intentions: "When the war is over, Pompeu Fabra and his works will be dragged along the Ramblas" (it was not talk to talk, the house of Pompeu Fabra,
the standardizer of Catalan language, was raided and his huge personal
library burned in the middle of the street. Pompeu Fabra was able to
escape into exile).
Another example of fascist aggression towards the Catalan language is pointed out by Paul Preston in "The Spanish Holocaust", given that during the civil war it practically led to an ethnic conflict:
"In
the days following the occupation of Lleida (…), the republican
prisoners identified as Catalans were executed without trial. Anyone who
heard them speak Catalan was very likely to be arrested. The arbitrary
brutality of the anti-Catalan repression reached such a point that
Franco himself had to issue an order ordering that mistakes that could
later be regretted be avoided ".
"There are examples of the murder of peasants for no other apparent
reason than that of speaking Catalan"
After a possible attempt at ethnic cleansing, the biopolitical imposition of Spanish during the Franco dictatorship, to the point of being considered an attempt at cultural genocide, democracy consolidated an asymmetric regime of bilingualism, in what has progressively been woven a web of laws and aids that privigate Spanish against Catalan, which becomes the weak language of bilingualism, and therefore, in the
absence of other states where it is spoken, is doomed to extinction in
the medium or short term. In the same vein, its use in the Spanish
Congress is prevented, and it is prevented from being official in Europe, unlike less spoken languages such as Gaelic. In other institutional areas, such as justice, Plataforma per la Llengua has denounced Catalanophobia. The association Soberania i Justícia have also denounced it in an act in the European Parliament.
In November 2005, Omnium Cultural organized a meeting of Catalan and Madrid intellectuals in the Círculo de bellas artes
in Madrid to show support for ongoing reform of Catalan Statute of
Autonomy, which sought to resolve territorial tensions, and among other
things better protect the Catalan language. On the Catalan side, a
flight was made with one hundred representatives of the cultural, civic,
intellectual, artistic and sporting world of Catalonia, but on the
Spanish side, except Santiago Carrillo, a politician from the Second Republic, did not attend any more. The subsequent failure of the statutory reform with respect to its
objectives opened the door to the growth of Catalan sovereignty.
Apart from language discrimination by public officials, e.g. in the hospitals, the current prohibition of using the Catalan language in state institutions such as Court, despite being the former Crown of Aragon,
with three Catalan-speaking territories, one of the co-founders of the
current Spanish state, is nothing more than the continuation of the
foreignization of Catalan-speaking people from the first third of the
20th century, in full swing of state racism and fascism. It also can be pointed the linguistic secessionism,
originally advocated by the Spanish far right and which has finally
been adopted by the Spanish government itself and state bodies.
By fragmenting Catalan language into as many languages as territories,
it becomes inoperative, economically suffocated, and becomes a political
toy in the hands of territorial politicians.
Susceptible to be classified as an ethnic democracy, the Spanish State currently only recognizes the gypsies as a national minority, excluding Catalans (and, of course, Valencians and Balearic), Basques and Galicians.
However, it is evident to any external observer that there are social
diversities within the Spanish State that qualify as manifestations of
national minorities, such as, for example, the existence of the main
three linguistic minorities in their ancestral territories.
United Kingdom
The United Kingdom is an unusual example of a nation state due to its "countries within a country". The United Kingdom is formed by the union of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, but it is a unitary state formed initially by the merger of two independent kingdoms, the Kingdom of England (which already included Wales) and the Kingdom of Scotland, but the Treaty of Union (1707) that set out the agreed terms has ensured the continuation of distinct features of each state, including separate legal systems and separate national churches.
In 2003, the British Government described the United Kingdom as "countries within a country". While the Office for National Statistics and others describe the United Kingdom as a "nation state", others, including a then Prime Minister, describe it as a "multinational state", and the term Home Nations is used to describe the four national teams that represent the four nations of the United Kingdom (England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales). Some refer to it as a "Union State".
There has been academic debate over whether the United Kingdom
can be legally dissolved, as it is recognized internationally as a
single nation state. English law jurist A.V. Dicey
wrote from an English legal perspective that the question is based on
whether the legislation giving rise to the union (the Union with
Scotland Act), one of the two pieces of legislation which created the
state, can be repealed. Dicey claimed because the Law of England does
not acknowledge the word "unconstitutional", as a matter of English law it can be repealed. He also stated any tampering with the Acts of Union 1707 would be political madness.
Minorities
The most obvious deviation from the ideal of "one nation, one state" is the presence of minorities, especially ethnic minorities, which are clearly not members of the majority nation. An ethnic nationalist definition of a nation
is necessarily exclusive: ethnic nations typically do not have open
membership. In most cases, there is a clear idea that surrounding
nations are different, and that includes members of those nations who
live on the "wrong side" of the border. Historical examples of groups
who have been specifically singled out as outsiders are the Roma and Jews in Europe.
Negative responses to minorities within the nation state have ranged from cultural assimilation enforced by the state, to expulsion, persecution, violence, and extermination.
The assimilation policies are usually enforced by the state, but
violence against minorities is not always state-initiated: it can occur
in the form of mob violence such as lynching or pogroms.
Nation states are responsible for some of the worst historical examples
of violence against minorities not considered part of the nation.
However, many nation states accept specific minorities as being part of the nation, and the term national minority is often used in this sense. The Sorbs
in Germany are an example: for centuries they have lived in
German-speaking states, surrounded by a much larger ethnic German
population, and they have no other historical territory. They are now
generally considered to be part of the German nation and are accepted as
such by the Federal Republic of Germany, which constitutionally
guarantees their cultural rights. Of the thousands of ethnic and
cultural minorities in nation states across the world, only a few have
this level of acceptance and protection.
Multiculturalism
is an official policy in some states, establishing the ideal of
coexisting existence among multiple and separate ethnic, cultural, and
linguistic groups. Other states preffer the interculturalism (or "melting pot" approach) alternative to multiculturalism, citing problems with latter as promoting self-segregation
tendencies among minority groups, challenging national cohesion,
polarizing society in groups that can't relate to one another,
generating problems in regard to minorities and immigrants' fluency in
the national language of use and integration with the rest of society
(generating hate and persecution against them from the "otherness" they
would generate in such a case according to its adherants), without
minorities having to give up certain parts of their culture before being
absorbed into a now changed majority culture by their contribution.
Many nations have laws protecting minority rights.
When national boundaries that do not match ethnic boundaries are drawn, such as in the Balkans and Central Asia, ethnic tension, massacres and even genocide, sometimes has occurred historically (see Bosnian genocide and 2010 South Kyrgyzstan ethnic clashes).
Irredentism
In principle, the border of a nation state would extend far enough to
include all the members of the nation, and all of the national homeland.
Again, in practice, some of them always live on the 'wrong side' of the
border. Part of the national homeland may be there too, and it may be
governed by the 'wrong' nation. The response to the non-inclusion of
territory and population may take the form of irredentism: demands to annex unredeemed territory and incorporate it into the nation state.
Irredentist claims are usually based on the fact that an
identifiable part of the national group lives across the border.
However, they can include claims to territory where no members of that
nation live at present, because they lived there in the past, the
national language is spoken in that region, the national culture has
influenced it, geographical unity with the existing territory, or a wide
variety of other reasons. Past grievances are usually involved and can
cause revanchism.
It is sometimes difficult to distinguish irredentism from pan-nationalism,
since both claim that all members of an ethnic and cultural nation
belong in one specific state. Pan-nationalism is less likely to specify
the nation ethnically. For instance, variants of Pan-Germanism have different ideas about what constituted Greater Germany, including the confusing term Grossdeutschland, which, in fact, implied the inclusion of huge Slavic minorities from the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Typically, irredentist demands are at first made by members of
non-state nationalist movements. When they are adopted by a state, they
typically result in tensions, and actual attempts at annexation are
always considered a casus belli, a cause for war.
In many cases, such claims result in long-term hostile relations
between neighbouring states. Irredentist movements typically circulate
maps of the claimed national territory, the greater nation state. That territory, which is often much larger than the existing state, plays a central role in their propaganda.
Irredentism should not be confused with claims to overseas
colonies, which are not generally considered part of the national
homeland. Some French overseas colonies would be an exception: French rule in Algeria unsuccessfully treated the colony as a département of France.
Future
It has been speculated by both proponents of globalization and various science fiction writers that the concept of a nation state may disappear with the ever-increasing interconnectedness of the world. Such ideas are sometimes expressed around concepts of a world government. Another possibility is a societal collapse and move into communal anarchy or zero world government, in which nation states no longer exist.
Clash of civilizations
The theory of the clash of civilizations lies in direct contrast to cosmopolitan theories about an ever more connected world that no longer requires nation states. According to political scientist Samuel P. Huntington, people's cultural and religious identities will be the primary source of conflict in the post–Cold War world.
The theory was originally formulated in a 1992 lecture at the American Enterprise Institute, which was then developed in a 1993 Foreign Affairs article titled "The Clash of Civilizations?", in response to Francis Fukuyama's 1992 book, The End of History and the Last Man. Huntington later expanded his thesis in a 1996 book The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order.
Huntington began his thinking by surveying the diverse theories about the nature of global politics in the post–Cold War period. Some theorists and writers argued that human rights, liberal democracy and capitalist free market economics had become the only remaining ideological alternative for nations in the post–Cold War world. Specifically, Francis Fukuyama, in The End of History and the Last Man, argued that the world had reached a Hegelian "end of history".
Huntington believed that while the age of ideology
had ended, the world had reverted only to a normal state of affairs
characterized by cultural conflict. In his thesis, he argued that the
primary axis of conflict in the future will be along cultural and
religious lines.
As an extension, he posits that the concept of different civilizations, as the highest rank of cultural identity, will become increasingly useful in analyzing the potential for conflict.
In the 1993 Foreign Affairs article, Huntington writes:
- It is my hypothesis that the fundamental source of conflict
in this new world will not be primarily ideological or primarily
economic. The great divisions among humankind and the dominating source
of conflict will be cultural. Nation states will remain the most
powerful actors in world affairs, but the principal conflicts of global
politics will occur between nations and groups of different
civilizations. The clash of civilizations will dominate global politics.
The fault lines between civilizations will be the battle lines of the
future.
Sandra Joireman suggests that Huntington may be characterised as a neo-primordialist, as, while he sees people as having strong ties to their ethnicity, he does not believe that these ties have always existed.
Historiography
Historians
often look to the past to find the origins of a particular nation
state. Indeed, they often put so much emphasis on the importance of the
nation state in modern times, that they distort the history of earlier
periods in order to emphasize the question of origins. Lansing and
English argue that much of the medieval history of Europe was structured
to follow the historical winners—especially the nation states that
emerged around Paris and London. Important developments that did not
directly lead to a nation state get neglected, they argue:
- one effect of this approach has been to privilege historical
winners, aspects of medieval Europe that became important in later
centuries, above all the nation state.... Arguably the liveliest
cultural innovation in the 13th century was the Mediterranean, centered
on Frederick II's
polyglot court and administration in Palermo...Sicily and the Italian
South in later centuries suffered a long slide into overtaxed poverty
and marginality. Textbook narratives, therefore, focus not on medieval
Palermo, with its Muslim and Jewish bureaucracies and Arabic-speaking
monarch, but on the historical winners, Paris and London.