It is in the ultimate best interest of every nation that transnational institutions replace nation-state power politics. |
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The second factor behind the creation of a new concept of school was the emergence of the nation-state. |
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The main focus of the public authorities in their economic development programmes is still often the nation-state framework. |
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In the homogenizing nation-state, justice and majority rule could for some time be perceived as one and the same. |
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In realist theory, the maximization of power is achieved by the nation-state in the international sphere, not the government. |
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In more specific terms, the subaltern woman can now locate her agency in film and televisual programming in her native nation-state. |
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We are accustomed to regarding the sovereign nation-state as the basic building block of world order. |
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But anything more general just smacks, to me, of a naivety about the historical construction of the nation-state. |
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In contrast, the approach of Tehran's realists is conditioned by the requirements of the nation-state and its demands for stability. |
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The advantage of the nation-state is its relative sense of voluntary cohesion and hence stability. |
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The nation-state alone offered sustainable freedom from imperial exploitation. |
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The spurious determinacy given the law at the level of the nation-state is entirely absent at the level of geopolitics. |
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Another central issue is treating the regions as a reference unit for cohesion policy tasks and not nation-state criteria. |
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The transition from the traditions of a dynastic empire to a modern nation-state was neither instantaneous nor a complete transformation. |
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To rethink the concept of popular sovereignty beyond the nation-state appears to entail a contradiction in terms. |
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The bureaucratic boundaries of the nation-state complicate intimate transnational exchange. |
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Imperial powers bequeathed the nation-state system to their colonies, but it has not worked well in either part of the world. |
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At that time, the modern nation-state began to regularize taxation and renounce the use of surprise plunder and confiscation as fiscal devices. |
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Eurosceptics claim that this is a threat to sovereignty, the end of the nation-state, and so on. |
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I do not use the term in the much-maligned sense of religious nationalism, or worship of the nation-state. |
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But our mixed-up legal strategy is to insist, paralytically, on a kind of hyper-sovereignty of the nation-state. |
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The central idea remains, however, that cultures and societies do not necessarily overlap with the boundaries of the nation-state. |
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When this century opened, the dominant foreign policy model was still that of nation-state politics, normally towards other states. |
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As Hannah Arendt assessed it a half-century ago, the decline of nation-state sovereignty was accompanied by the decline of the rights of man. |
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The rise of the nation-state saw a simplification of society, as power was increasingly concentrated in the hands of secular governments. |
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The very idea of a nation-state is one imported from the west. |
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At the outset of the 21st century, the world finds itself in a transitional phase between the modern nation-state system and postmodern forms of global governance. |
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At the minimum, they wipe out rational debate about problems or conflicts, and they strive to demonize and delegitimate the target, whether ethnic group or nation-state. |
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One important argument for the one-party system has been that a multi-party system in Africa would come to be based on ethnic allegiances and thus counteract the consolidation of the nation-state. |
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But the truth is Ukraine as a pure-blooded nation-state is more an idea than a historical fact. |
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The decline of nation-state based concepts of public welfare is the consequence of this development. |
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Similarly, attempts to enforce a modern nation-state may also open the way to such risks. |
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For example, the nation-state is seen to be losing ground to trade and religious groupings as a primary source of identity. |
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It was Enlightenment France which, by coining the concept of the nation-state, gave substance to the concept of nation. |
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But the capitalist system and its nation-state soon became a fetter upon economic and cultural development. |
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Those are hallmarks of nation-state operations. |
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Here, the nation-state, the current guarantor of the stability and security of our societies, becomes a force recalcitrant to any change that might make it obsolete or weaken its influence and its power. |
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There is no democracy above the nation-state. |
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Personally, I would add the notion of sovereignty, because I believe that one of the challenges that the world will increasingly face, and which it already faces, is that of the nation-state and the notion of sovereignty. |
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Their insistence on homogeneity within the nation-state in the name of national solidarity further eroded democratic rights and restricted the exercise of the promised freedoms. |
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A centralized nation-state, with complete control of trade and currency, is no longer possible in a global village. |
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However, unlike TRT, Med TV is not the handmaid of a nation-state. |
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The modern centralised Sagha is largely a result of the development of the modern nation-state and the consequential centralisation of political power. |
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In Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, or Oman, the nation-state evolves in a political environment shaped by the dynast, his family, and their effective concentration of power. |
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Now, its descendent organizations are dedicated to advancing the 20th-century throwback notion of the primacy of the nation-state. |
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Faced with the imminent departure of those they looked to for patronage, Anglo-Indians were compelled to invent new positions for themselves in the emerging nation-state. |
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The nation-state is made stronger by the absence of shared ends, and the absence indeed of any rational basis on which to argue about ends. |
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If the Scots vote Yes for Independence then that will result in the obvious break-up of the United Kingdom as a nation-state. |
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Haas wrote Beyond the Nation-State, contending that the nation-state system was dysfunctional and should be replaced. |
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Nor, frankly, would any other nation-state consent to its own dismantling. |
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Oyen has argued that politicians and research councils give funding to comparative research that focuses on their nation-state. |
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Concretely, the Lebanese nation-state relegates mothers to the function of reproducers and caretakers. |
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Promotion of the human rights approach to AIDS cannot remain solely the charge of the nation-state, however, especially as poor and beleaguered governments are exhorted to do more and more with less and less. |
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The West was basing its optimism on its trust in exact sciences, industry, nation-state, and on intellectuals' commitment to people's emancipating conscientisation worldwide. |
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Every square centimetre of the planet's land surface, with the exception of Antartica, is part of one nation-state or another. |
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By fragmentizing Syria, US strategists seek to destroy it as a functioning nation-state ruled by the Assad government. |
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China may call itself a nation-state, but in essence it is a civilization-state dating back at least two millennia. |
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Yet for those who fell, there would be no triumphal arch they were too late to be honoured by the departing Empire, and too early to be accepted by the free nation-state. |
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In the nation-state, the affinitive power of identity and group allegiance has been channeled into country development, encouraging stability, growth, and good governance. |
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From what is observable to the eye, no European nation-state has been as successful in squaring that circle as has the United States, which is itself observably challenged. |
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In particular, some of the literature in global or denationalized citizenship goes in these optimistic directions as it attempts to address the limits of the nation-state. |
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We must find ways to answer these polished efforts to make torture and conquest acceptable, countering the fiction that the nation-state system is irrecuperable. |
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He was recognised as the king of a sovereign nation-state by the UN, and as hief of the Senussi Order, a moderate Sufi movement in Sunnism called al-Senussiyah. |
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