Behind this mentality lies the progressive lobby's detestation of nationhood and Orwellian aspiration to world government. |
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His study of representative contemporary types in Irishmen all purveyed an inclusive notion of Irish nationhood. |
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The answer depended ultimately on a policy decision informed by history and indefinable concepts of nationality and nationhood. |
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The sentimentality has less to do with politics, and more with nationhood and the great family of Germany. |
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Symbols of nationhood include the national flag, a full golden moon on a blue background, and the national anthem. |
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Into this steaming pot are thrown various statements about religion, culture, nationhood and patriotism. |
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In symbolic terms, a national currency is felt by some to be part of the very idea of nationhood. |
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The concept of nationhood is, I think, inherently bound up with the concept of national defense. |
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Beneath the all important religious divisions lurked anxieties about nationhood and ethnicity. |
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The whole point of America is that it didn't just grow into nationhood from the gradual merging of peoples and consolidation of lands. |
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These settlements provide the opportunity for Maori New Zealanders to move forward with all others in the spirit of shared nationhood. |
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Richard Falk argues that the statelessness of the terrorists might make democracy or nationhood an inappropriate forum of address. |
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It means disorganization, destruction, obliteration, of the institutions of government and nationhood. |
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The culture is still based around tribal and family ties, making the idea of nationhood difficult. |
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There is a sense in which nationhood is forged and reproduced through the standardisation of currency, weights, measures and education. |
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It gives one a sense of the endless, rhythmic waves of Kurdish struggles for nationhood. |
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But modern nationhood is a complicated business, so you'd expect anomalies. |
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Attitudes like that show a distinct lack of maturity when it comes to nationhood. |
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To those who lionise him, he is a clear-eyed defender of faith and nationhood, a speaker of truth in a time of deceivers. |
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Russian armies crushed the rebellions, with devastating effects for Polish nationhood. |
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Taken together, they impart a kind of tenuous concretion to the vague concept of nationhood. |
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What has made him invulnerable as patron saint, however, is his saltire symbol on our flag, the sign of our nationhood. |
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In the capital, people celebrated their impending nationhood after decades of struggle and strife. |
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No institution has done more to build a sense of Scottish culture, identity and nationhood over the past generation. |
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Magazines, from their contribution to nationhood to demassification after the advent of television. |
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The Vietnamese celebrated nationhood by changing one important name in their homeland. |
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Creating a sense of common nationhood has been a task consciously undertaken by American leaders over the years. |
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Megalithic temples that predate the Egyptian pyramids, Bronze Age archaeological sites, Phoenician inscriptions, and Roman catacombs all contribute to a sense of nationhood. |
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Thus, in terms of this world the factor of nationhood does not enter the picture. |
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For each nation must have its own state as the outward expression of its particular nationhood. |
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That formula was later applied around the world to provide a comfortable half-way house for former British colonies on the road to nationhood. |
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To some extent he had retained affection, by staying out of daily politics, preferring a loftier role as symbol of new nationhood. |
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In allegorical scenes and mythical tales, girls have personified the hopes and struggles of nationhood. |
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Its territory and wealth are greater, its population sparser, its sense of nationhood more fragile. |
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As the movement for Catalan nationhood has whipped up a storm, the campaign for Scottish independence has lost some wind from its sails. |
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Many historians believe that those terrible years were the time when Canada truly achieved nationhood. |
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I understand its position with regard to the whole discussion of nationhood. |
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Despite the apparent victory of Bill C-31, women and children still face discrimination through exclusion from membership and nationhood. |
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The Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River have been major North American trade arteries since long before the U. S. or Canada achieved nationhood. |
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The people of East Timor have endured the brutality of colonization and invasion, to emerge into the uncertain light of nationhood. |
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It is our belief that what ever happens at this early stage of nationhood has greater significance to the future of the country. |
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Without the ability to determine membership and nationhood, our children have a bleak future. |
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Our greatest challenge as a country is how to forge lasting nationhood out of that diversity. |
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Peoples are always innocent, like the children of these peoples devoid of nationhood. |
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But in recent decades we have developed our own strong sense of nationhood. |
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Parties to a treaty do not give up nationhood or their own ways of living, working and governing themselves. |
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Yet nationhood is such a prickly issue, it overwhelms even great tragedy. |
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It reminds us that nationhood and identity are not one and the same. |
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Where colonial constructions force disparate peoples together by the arbitrariness of a colonial map-maker's pen, nationhood becomes an elusive notion. |
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The real problem is not Scotland's descent into third-rate football nationhood, but the fact that so many young folk won't play any sport, no matter what choices we give them. |
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In the course of the struggle of our forefathers to achieve nationhood for us, they gave testimony to their national loyalty by sacrificing their lives for us. |
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Canada's first steps toward nationhood in the nineteenth century followed more than 100 years of political conflict between French and English colonists. |
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The formalisation of Australian nationhood occurred relatively late. |
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Bavaria retains a strong sense of nationhood and rich local traditions. |
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The party believes that Indian nationhood stems from a deep cultural bonding of the people which overrides differences of caste, region, religion and language. |
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In Dadat camp, for example, several clutters of this nature have been put together, with the whole purpose of defending Somalian nationhood and identity. |
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Since Belgium became an independent nation only in 1830, defining nationhood was a special issue for the historians of the late 19th century. |
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The reported security incidents appear routine and characteristic of the formative stages of nationhood for a country emerging from violent conflict. |
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That is the ideology that must be combated in the name of a universal concept of nationhood and pluralism which is at the very heart of democracy. |
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Related: Home is where the art is: narratives of nationhood For a bespectacled, spotty, lanky boy with a weird love for the Jesus and Mary Chain, Stockport town centre was also a fine breeding ground for watchfulness. |
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Human rights values and principles are integrated into the school curricula to promote human dignity, humanism, sense of nationhood, work ethics, and other similar values. |
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In the eyes of these men and their supporters, inviting the institutional descendant of the F. L. N. to celebrate French nationhood is sacrilegious. |
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The forum is aimed to increase civic engagement of young people in order to strengthen nationhood, mutual understanding and trust. |
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An enlarged integrationist Europe is not by nature democratic: in fact it violates one of the most basic of human rights, the right to nationhood. |
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King David followed by welding them into nationhood. |
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The name Vimy Ridge is part of the very fabric of Canadian nationhood, for, at Vimy, our soldiers brought both pride and unity to the Canada of their day. |
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Yet every year the EU takes more of the powers of nationhood. |
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Parliaments should reflect the entire spectrum of social diversity and in particular the idea of nationhood, based of course on citizenship but also on group identities, community identities. |
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They nobly defended our values, our nationhood and our ideals. |
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Because the very concept of nationhood is sentimental. |
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That guarantee has helped remediate the institutional racism that was the original sin of American nationhood, and has made America as good at assimilating immigrants as any society on earth. |
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It is a story recalled by its main players in a series of remarkably frank conversations as one of unlikely alliances and bitter divisions, a clash of power, identity and the deepest questions of nationhood. |
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The denigration of sovereign nationhood hypnotized the public into applauding the dismantling of the very institutions that offer the only hope of representative government. |
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In the bar of the Big Cam pub in Neath, one of the many south Wales towns that have declined since the loss of heavy industry, sport and the price of a pint were being discussed rather than nationhood. |
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That is happening of course as the members of that race are coming from east and west and establishing their nationhood again in their promised land. |
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The atmosphere of confrontation that has been evident will have to be counterbalanced by an approach more focused on strengthening Canadian nationhood. |
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Having misdiagnosed nationalism as the cause of Europe's sufferings, European leaders undertook the steady attenuation of nationhood. |
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The decorative theme of the room is the legend of King Arthur, considered by many Victorians the source of their nationhood. |
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It holds that although the concept nationhood may be recent, nations have always existed. |
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With the fall of the Ottoman government, power vacuums developed and conflicting claims to land and nationhood began to emerge. |
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A sense of Indonesian nationhood exists alongside strong regional identities. |
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There also was a long tradition of pushing back Muslims, which stemmed from Portugal's fight for nationhood against the Moors. |
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The usual European solutions which defined nationhood in terms of language would not work. |
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By this time political events have made it clear that the settler and indigenous strands are inextricably bound in a sense of nationhood independent of Britain. |
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