ABSTRACT

Different survey-based and case study research has shown that, since the 1980s, minority nationalist parties have become increasingly supportive of European integration. However, this account of minority nationalist party attitudes towards Europe is problematic in several respects. This book makes a major contribution to the academic literature by undertaking a comparative study of the attitudes of minority nationalist parties towards European integration. The volume provides:

  • A systematic analysis of the ways in which minority nationalist party attitudes towards European integration have evolved from 1979 to 2005.
  • Original empirical data on hitherto under-researched minority nationalist parties in Wales, Galicia and Corsica.
  • Major new insights into the European attitudes of minority nationalist parties.

This book challenges the general assumption in the academic literature that the minority nationalist party family will always be pro-European and demonstrates how it needs to be revised in light of the evidence provided by this study. It will be of strong interest to students and scholars interested in minority nationalism, the Europeanisation of political parties, comparative research on regional politics and in contemporary debates about nationalism.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

Minority Nationalist Parties and European Integration

chapter |33 pages

Wales

Plaid Cymru

chapter |34 pages

Galicia

The Bloque Nacionalista Galego

chapter |30 pages

Corsica

A Comparison of Moderate and Radical Corsican Nationalist Parties

chapter |28 pages

Conclusions

A Comparative Analysis of Minority Nationalist Party Attitudes Towards European Integration