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INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS – Vol.I – Nationalism and Identity Politics in International Relations - M. Huysseune
©Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS)
NATIONALISM AND IDENTITY POLITICS IN INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
M. Huysseune
Department of Political Science, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
Keywords: nationalism, nation-states, national identity, self-determination, secession,
irredentism, minority rights
Contents
1. Nationalism and National Identities
1.1. Outlining the Meaning of National Identities and Nationalism
1.2. The Articulation of National Identities
1.3. The Moral Ambivalence of Nationalism
2. Nationalism and International Relations
2.1. A Historical Overview
2.2. The Right to Self-Determination
2.3. Minority Rights
2.4. Nationalism and State Politics
3. Conclusions
Bibliography
Biographical Sketch
Summary
Nationalism is a multi-faceted phenomenon. Expressing both claims for recognition and
for superiority, it is marked by an intrinsic moral ambivalence. Politically, its emergence
has coincided with the affirmation of liberal and democratic ideas, and in particular the
notion of popular sovereignty. It expresses the political identification of citizens with
their state, and the policies of governments to reinforce such identification. It is based
on the existence of a shared national identity, relying on the presence of historical,
cultural, language or religious bonds. However, because of the imperfect congruence of
states and national identities, nationalism has also developed outside and against nation-
state, to affirm the rights of minorities.
Since the international system is based on sovereign nation-states as its constituent
units, nationalism is an intrinsic feature of it, often underestimated by International
Relations theory. Nationalist policies of states, the competition for economic and
political power in an international context where economic and political power
differentials remain outspoken, contribute to the persistence of nationalism. Because
statehood is the established form of recognition of national identities, the international
system is moreover confronted with a permanent tension between maintaining the
stability of the state system, and claims of minorities for statehood. While reluctant to
accept such claims, except in the specific case of colonies, the international system has
been more attentive to the cultural, linguistic and religious rights of minorities.
In the present political context, where nation-states remain the basic units of the