Nation State Evolution
Nation State Evolution
Nation State Evolution
The legitimacy of a nation-state’s rule over a territory and over the population
inhabiting it stems from the right of a core national group within the state (which
may include all or only some of its citizens) to self-determination. Members of the
core national group see the state as belonging to them and consider the
approximate territory of the state to be their homeland. Accordingly, they demand
that other groups, both within and outside the state, recognize and respect their
control over the state.
Nation-state building
Although France after the French Revolution (1787–99) is often cited as the first
nation-state, some scholars consider the establishment of the English
Commonwealth in 1649 as the earliest instance of nation-state creation.
Since the late 18th century the nation-state has gradually become the dominant
vehicle of rule over geographic territories, replacing polities that were governed
through other principles of legitimacy.
The latter included dynastic monarchies (e.g., the Habsburg and Ethiopian
empires), theocratic states (e.g., the Dalai Lama’s rule over Tibet and the rule of
the prince-bishops of Montenegro), colonial empires (justified by colonizing
powers as a means of spreading a “true” religion or of bringing progress to
“backward” peoples), and communist revolutionary governments that purported to
act in the name of a transnational working class.
Three types of wars are more prevalent at approximately the time of the foundation
of nation-states:
(1) Wars of independence aiming to end foreign rule (e.g., the Algerian War of
Independence in 1954–62 and the Kosovo conflict in 1998–99)
(2) Civil wars within new nation-states arising from struggles over the states’
ethno-nationalist character, sometimes resulting in secessionist efforts by ethnic
minorities (e.g., the 1963–67 uprising of the Somalian minority in Kenya, which
demanded union of their area of residence with neighboring Somalia)
Citizenship in nation-states
Nation-states strictly enforce institutionalized criteria for naturalization, known as
citizenship regimes.
Nationalization
The ideal of a state of and for a nation is reinforced not only through citizenship
regimes but also through mechanisms that foster national integration and develop
and sustain emotional commitment to the homeland.
Example:
Nation is represented in official state symbols (e.g., flags and the uniforms of
security forces); and, in many nation-states, the language of the core national group
is made the official language of the country.
Diversity management
Assimilation
Exclusion
Accommodation
In many cases, different policies have been applied to different minority groups,
thus leading to different levels of social integration and cultural assimilation or
alienation.