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National Self-determination (national + self-determination)
Selected AbstractsFemale and National Self-Determination: A Gender Re-reading of ,The Apogee of Nationalism'NATIONS AND NATIONALISM, Issue 4 2000Glenda Sluga This article offers a gender re-reading of the international history of the post-First World War peace process, a period when nationalism is said to have reached its ,apogee', when national self-determination and mutual cooperation between nations in the form of a League of Nations defined liberal aspirations for a democratic new world order. It was also a period when international women's organisations emphasised female self-determination as both a national and international issue. Juxtaposed, these two aspects of the history of the peace of 1919 shed light on the importance of sex difference to the idea of national self-determination and to the overlapping constitution of the national and the international as spheres of political agency and influence in the early twentieth century. [source] National Self-Determination, Global Equality and Moral ArbitrarinessTHE JOURNAL OF POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY, Issue 3 2010Chris Armstrong First page of article [source] The Limited Modesty of SubsidiarityEUROPEAN LAW JOURNAL, Issue 3 2005N. W. Barber In the process of discussing the European principle, a contrast is drawn with the Catholic principle of subsidiarity and with the rival doctrine of national self-determination. It is argued that the European principle is a central part of the Union's constitutional identity, and, as such, crucial to an understanding of the European project. [source] Resistance to alien rule in Taiwan and Korea,NATIONS AND NATIONALISM, Issue 1 2009MICHAEL HECHTER ABSTRACT. Although alien rule is widely assumed to be illegitimate, nationalist resistance to it varies across time and space. This article explores why there was greater nationalist resistance to Japanese colonial rule in Korea than Taiwan from the turn of the twentieth century to the end of World War II. Resistance to alien rulers requires both a supply of participants in nationalist collective action and a demand for national self-determination. The article assesses two principal propositions: (1) that the supply of participants increases to the degree that native elites are stripped of their traditional authority and offered few incentives to collaborate; and (2) that the demand for national self-determination decreases to the degree that alien rule is fair and effective. A comparative analysis of the effects of Japanese alien rule in Taiwan and Korea suggests that nationalist resistance is greater in the earliest phases of occupation, that the greater native elites' opportunities, the weaker the resistance to alien rule; and that the fairer the governance, the weaker the resistance to alien rule. [source] Female and National Self-Determination: A Gender Re-reading of ,The Apogee of Nationalism'NATIONS AND NATIONALISM, Issue 4 2000Glenda Sluga This article offers a gender re-reading of the international history of the post-First World War peace process, a period when nationalism is said to have reached its ,apogee', when national self-determination and mutual cooperation between nations in the form of a League of Nations defined liberal aspirations for a democratic new world order. It was also a period when international women's organisations emphasised female self-determination as both a national and international issue. Juxtaposed, these two aspects of the history of the peace of 1919 shed light on the importance of sex difference to the idea of national self-determination and to the overlapping constitution of the national and the international as spheres of political agency and influence in the early twentieth century. [source] |