ABSTRACT

Political Loyalty and the Nation-State examines the gradual weakening of the state's ability to order the political allegiances of its subjects. At the focal centre of the book lies the question of the extent to which it is possible to invest political principles, such as the rules and procedures of democracy, with a sentiment of loyalty and whether political loyalty can become merely a matter of choice and personal responsibility. The authors consider theoretical issues, problems of loyalty arising from population movement and case studies of conflicts of loyalty from Italy, Northern Ireland, and Russia. It is shown that loyalty can become decoupled from state, territory and nation; that loyalties can be multiple; and that today's loyalties reflect advanced attitudes towards difference.

part |74 pages

Rethinking National Loyalty

chapter |16 pages

Loyalty and Plurality

Images of the Nation in Australia

chapter |16 pages

Deterritorialized Loyalty

Multiculturalism And Bosnia

chapter |15 pages

Conflicting Loyalties

Women'S Human Rights and the Politics of Identity

chapter |15 pages

Political Loyalty and Military Disobedience

Militarism, Pacifism, Realism and Just-War Theory Compared

part |81 pages

Competing Loyalties

chapter |18 pages

Divided Loyalties, Empowered Citizenship?

Muslims in Britain

chapter |17 pages

Wider Still and Wider May Thy Bounds Be Set?

National Loyalty and the European Union

chapter |16 pages

Loyalty to the Folkhem?

Scandinavian Scepticism and the European Project

part |13 pages

Conclusions