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  1. Civic nationalism, otherwise known as democratic nationalism, is a form of nationalism that adheres to traditional liberal values of freedom, tolerance, equality, and individual rights, and is not based on ethnocentrism. [1] [2] Civic nationalists often defend the value of national identity by saying that individuals need it as a partial shared ...

  2. Nationalism is a product of necessity: It constructs a new form of identity and community as a response to urban uprooting and industrialization. The dislocating effects of modernity require a refashioning of culture and identity. People is all they have got: this is the essence of the underdevelopment dilemma itself.

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  4. Nov 17, 2022 · Abstract. The purpose of this article is to lay out the debates and arguments around three key broader issues that dominate nationalism studies: (a) the meaning of a nation and nationalism and the ...

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  5. Mar 14, 2023 · Furthermore, they argued that ‘defining national identity in both ethno-cultural and civic terms is not in itself a contradiction; rather, it seems quite likely that many individuals understand national membership both as a function of sharing deep cultural and ancestral traits and ascribing to certain civic norms and values’ (2021, p. 96 ...

  6. Mill's successors have also seen the value of political nationalism in instrumental terms as providing the social cement and cohesion necessary for active citizenship and social welfare. 9 And anti‐colonial nationalists have valued nationalism as providing the solidarity and collective political agency necessary for effective resistance and ...

  7. Jun 20, 2018 · First, a nation is strong and legitimate as long as it remains homogeneous. In this sense, one of the primary objectives of a nationalist leader is to achieve and preserve the unity of nation. Second, national interests are always superior to the interests of the individual members of that nation.

  8. Liberal nationalists argue that the development of modern national identity cannot be understood by reference solely to the instrumental needs of capitalism; in addition to this functional impetus, national identity also finds its roots in the pre-political attachments of common culture and pre-modern society. 17 Liberal nationalists point to ...