Sociology, Volume 34Clarendon Press, 2000 - Sociology |
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Page 24
... modern societies were fundamentally nationalist whether they admitted it or not . This was because they required people's active and daily commitment to and expression of their nationa- lity , not usually in an explicit way , but in the ...
... modern societies were fundamentally nationalist whether they admitted it or not . This was because they required people's active and daily commitment to and expression of their nationa- lity , not usually in an explicit way , but in the ...
Page 25
... modern societies , each requires the other . What both perspectives miss is that nationality and citizenship are neither necessarily in alignment nor are they anti- thetical . Rather , it is becoming clear that they are in complex ...
... modern societies , each requires the other . What both perspectives miss is that nationality and citizenship are neither necessarily in alignment nor are they anti- thetical . Rather , it is becoming clear that they are in complex ...
Page 27
... modern past for that to be an accurate description . It has been described as an ' unprincipled society ' ( Marquand ... societies are nation - states , at least in ideal - typical form . If the United Kingdom does not fit , what of other ...
... modern past for that to be an accurate description . It has been described as an ' unprincipled society ' ( Marquand ... societies are nation - states , at least in ideal - typical form . If the United Kingdom does not fit , what of other ...
Contents
DAVID MCCRONE and Richard KieLY Nationalism and Citizenship 19 | 19 |
Social Mobility Trends in the First Half | 35 |
ROBERT REINER Crime and Control in Britain 71 | 71 |
Copyright | |
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