303,766 research outputs found

    Dadabhai Naoroji ā€“ from economic nationalism to political nationalism

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    Dadabhai Naoroji (1825-1917) was among the leading Indian nationalist leaders who aroused the feeling of economic nationalism and propagated for it. The most instrumental in this regard had been his theory of drain. The paper studies this theory and its role in awakening the desire and movement to achieve economic nationalism. It also examines the stages through, which Dadabhai passed from economic nationalism to political nationalism or the self-rule which was his final call. The paper will conclude with a remark that economic nationalism and political nationalism are complementary and supplementary to each other and none will be realized in true sense of the word without the achievement of other.Economic Nationalism; Political Nationalism; Drain theory; Dadabhai Naorogy; Sir Syed ahmad Khan; Indian Economic Thought

    Missions, nationalism, and the end of empire

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    Title: Missions, nationalism, and the end of empire. Missions, nationalism, and the end of empire x, 313 p. Publisher: Grand Rapids ; Cambridge : Eerdmans, 2003

    Globalization, Expectations Model of Economic Nationalism, and Consumer Behavior

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    Purpose ā€“ The goals of the paper are to propose, measure, and empirically test the expectations model of economic nationalism. The model posits that economic nationalism is reļ¬‚ected in peopleā€™s expectations of their government, domestic ļ¬rms, and the general public, in terms of restricting the activities of foreign ļ¬rms. Design/methodology/approach ā€“ A conļ¬rmatory factor analysis is conducted to test the model, using the LISREL procedure. Findings ā€“ Results show acceptable ļ¬t for the proposed model. Reliability of each of the three dimensions of economic nationalism is in the acceptable range. A nomological validity test showed that economic nationalism is related to other constructs not included in the model. Research limitations/implications ā€“ A limitation of the model is that it is based on a single sample. Future studies can test the generalizability of model with samples from different countries. Practical implications ā€“ The implication of the study is that increasing globalization might lead to an increase in economic nationalism. Business executives, therefore, need to focus not only on the beneļ¬ts that they will derive from entering a country, but also the beneļ¬ts they will deliver to the domestic economy by entering the country. Originality/value ā€“ The paper presents an expectations model of economic nationalism. The model is based on the premise that peopleā€™s expectations of their government, domestic businesses, and the general public in terms of their role in restricting the activities of foreign ļ¬rms are reļ¬‚ective of economic nationalism. The more people expect of these three players the more economically nationalistic they will be. The value of the paper is to researchers in international business and global marketing and to business executives involved in managing global operations

    How and Why lslamophobia is tied to English Nationalism but not to Scottish Nationalism

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    Muslim minorities throughout Europe are under threat of collateral damage from the Blair/Bush \u27War on Terror.\u27 In Scotland they also have to cope with the added possibility that Scottish nationalism might develop an \u27ethnic\u27 as well as a \u27civic\u27 dimension. But is Scottish nationalism part of the problem or part of the solution? Paradoxically, Muslims are under less pressure in Scotland than in England, despite Scotland\u27s move over recent decades--psychologically as well as institutionally--towards nationalism

    POLICY OF NATIONALISM GUIDANCE THROUGH IN TRADITIONAL MARKET MANAGEMENT IN CENTRAL JAVA

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    A research on policy nationalism guidance through in traditional markets management in the province of Central Java is implemented in ā€œPasar Gede Soloā€ with qualitative methods. The reason for selecting ā€œPasar Gede Soloā€ because of Solo City has a lot of cultural heritages that are still held strong until today. The cultural heritage is the local identity. The Local identity can develop into the province identity, then to be the national identity. A strong national identity shows high Nationalism which reflected from loyalty, passion and pride of the nation itself. The number of local identities in ā€œPasar Gede Soloā€ is likely to evolve into national identity should be encouraged to preserve the Government's policy to strengthen Indonesia Nationalism

    3. Nationalism Transformed

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    Many of the same governments which were introducing the institutions of democracy and the welfare state between 1871 and 1914 were also engaged during those very years in a form of territorial and economic expansion called colonialism or imperialism. The latter term is a tricky one because it often carries two overtones. It is sometimes used to include any territorial expansion, and it now exudes a strong odor of disapproval. Here it will be used, without any connotation of condemnation or approbation, to mean economic and political penetration of fairly remote areas populated by people with a culture quite different from that of the expansionist power. Although there are still difficulties, this definition will cover such similar events as the establishment and expansion of the British, French, Italian, German, and Belgian colonial empires in Asia and Africa, the extension of Russian power in Asia, and the penetration of Latin American and the Pacific Islands by the United States. [excerpt

    Music and nationalism

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    Unpublished manuscript book chapter related to the book Culture and Authenticity (2007), Oxford: Basil Blackwell

    Scottish exceptionalism? Normative codes of Scottish nationalism in the British and EU crises

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    Scotland has thus far proved immune to the appeal of right-wing populism present in many European neoliberal democracies. This paper argues that changing tension balances in the crises facing the UK as a union state cannot be reduced to an understanding of the supposedly internal challenge of Scottish sub-state nationalism. Instead sub-state nationalism needs to be situated in the shifting long-term, inter-state power balances of Britain as a union state and a rising and falling world power. Such an approach builds on the promise offered by the historical sociology of Norbert Elias to account for the over-functioning of the normative humanist we-ideals of Scottish civic nationalism in the British and EU crises

    Nationalism and Crisis

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    Nationalism seems a persistent ideology in academia as much as in politics; despite the fact that it has been shown that nationalism is deeply unjust for minorities. A case for national identity is often invoked to supplement liberalism regarding the inner difficulties that liberal theories have to explain their membership, assure stability and produce endorsement. So, it seems that national identity may also be required for justice. While this controversy continues, I argue that a different approach is available. We can define a conception of legitimacy independently from a conception of justice, and then ask what legitimacy requires from our national allegiances. If everything goes well, much of the controversy from justice disappears as we find that the case for cultural nationalism may be illegitimate for liberal democracies

    [Review of] Raymond L. Hall (Ed.). Ethnic Autonomy -- Comparative Dynamics: The Americas, Europe and the Developing World

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    Hall has done us a service in putting together this wide-ranging collection of essays on ethnic separatist movements. The volume is particularly timely because of the twentieth century paradoxes of the drive for global unity and nationalism, and nationalism and a blossoming of ethnic separatist movements. (The book is not unique. See, 6.9. Chester L. Hunt and Lewis Walker, Ethnic Dynamics: Patterns of Intergroup Relations in Various Societies, Learning Publications, Inc., 1979.
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