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The Republican Road to Nationalization
In: The American Left, p. 161-173
Nationalization of Land and Industry
In: Empire and Revolution, p. 371-399
3. History and the Nationalization of Hinduism (1991)
In: Empire and Nation
Nationalization and the Background to Recent Regulatory Issues
In: Industrial Economic Regulation
Between Nationalization and Privatization: Common Property as the Third Way?
In: Institutions in Transition, p. 157-185
The Psychology of Wasta and Its Impact on Nationalization and Expatriation
In: The Political Economy of Wasta: Use and Abuse of Social Capital Networking, p. 115-128
Urban Governance and the Nationalization of State Space: Political Geographies of Spatial Keynesianism
In: New State Spaces, p. 114-171
From Nazi Re-Annexation to Full Citizenship: The Final Stage of Nationalization, 1940–6
In: Marianne or Germania?, p. 253-291
Wither the Local? Nationalization, Modernization, and the Mobilization of Urban Communities in England and France, c. 1900–18
In: Nationalism and the Reshaping of Urban Communities in Europe, 1848–1914, p. 182-203
Racism and Nationalism in the United Kingdom: A View from the Periphery
Considers historical aspects of the political economy of nationalization at the periphery of the UK, drawing on a discussion of the literature, particularly Michael Banton's (eg, 1991 [see abstract 91X8195]) work on race relations. It is suggested that the process of nationalization has proceeded by means of historically specific articulations of nationalism & racism that have occurred in both securing English domination in the UK & in reproducing British domination in Africa & India. Recent analyses of the situation in Northern Ireland from a race relations perspective have failed to account for the incompleteness of the process of nationalization in the UK. It is argued that a proper analysis of the situation in Northern Ireland would require several steps: a distinction between the biological characteristics of the human body & the cultural articulation of these characteristics, establishment of the everyday processes of such articulation, & interpretation of the meaning of racism in these processes. It is concluded that the problems endemic to Banton's race relations paradigm can be averted by rejecting the use of race as an analytic category & instead analyzing actual claims made to a distinct origin or history by various social groups in contestation. D. M. Smith
The Cyclical Phenomenon of Resource Nationalism in Latin America
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"The Cyclical Phenomenon of Resource Nationalism in Latin America" published on by Oxford University Press.
Party Systems in Latin America
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"Party Systems in Latin America" published on by Oxford University Press.