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    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      27 November 2025
      23 October 2025
      ISBN:
      9781009527767
      9781009527798
      9781009527804
      Open access funder:
      ETH Zurich
      Creative Commons:
      Creative Common License - CC Creative Common License - BY Creative Common License - NC Creative Common License - ND
      This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0.
      https://creativecommons.org/creativelicenses
      Dimensions:
      (229 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.5kg, 394 Pages
      Dimensions:
      (229 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.25kg, 394 Pages
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    Book description

    Following Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014, the recent conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East signals the return of geopolitics. This book challenges conventional approaches that ignore border change, arguing that geopolitics is driven by nationalism and focusing on how nationalism transforms the state. Using geocoded historical maps covering state borders and ethnic groups in Europe, the authors' spatial approach shows how, since the French Revolution, nationalism has caused increasing congruence between state and national borders and how a lack of congruence increased the risk of armed conflict. This macroprocess is traced from early modern Europe and widens the geographic scope to the entire world in the mid-twentieth century. The analysis shows that the risk of conflict may be increased by how nationalists seeking to revive past golden ages and restore their nations' prestige respond to incongruent borders. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

    Reviews

    ‘This magnificent work, through groundbreaking empirical research, demonstrates the destabilizing power of ethnonationalism contesting the spatial incongruities between state boundaries and the contours of cultural difference.  In so doing, it challenges conventional wisdoms and sets a new standard for thinking about war, separatism, ethnic cleansing, and the transformation of the state system.'

    Mark R. Beissinger - Henry W. Putnam Professor in the Department of Politics, Princeton University

    ‘Among the very many things that make this book an instant classic, let me emphasize two. It brings nationalist agents and their narratives back in to explain the size and nature of contemporary states. It deploys amazing empirics – at a level unseen of in previous work on nation-state formation.'

    Carles Boix - Robert Garrett Professor of Politics and Public Affairs, Princeton University

    ‘This book is a milestone in three massively important literatures: on nationalism, state formation and war. It sets the standard for new generations, a standard that will be very hard to match, let alone beat. It is rich in conceptual innovation, analytical clarity, and empirical analysis. It is a seminal contribution to our whole discipline.'

    Hein Goemans - Professor of Political Science and Director of the Peter D. Watson Center for Conflict & Cooperation, University of Rochester

    ‘This tour de force of scholarly teamwork theorizes and empirically tests how nationalism reshapes states through border change and conflict. Using a rich array of historical data, it shows how state-nation incongruence drives instability – illustrated by cases like Russia's annexation of Crimea. An essential contribution, it sheds new light on nationalism's enduring impact on state evolution and global order.'

    Beth Simmons - Andrea Mitchell University Professor of Law and Political Science, University of Pennsylvania

    ‘Did war make the state and the state make war? And if so, why do powerful states begin to shrink rather than grow and conquer, as our dominant theories predict? Cederman and his co-authors provide rigorous and nuanced answers to these and other questions in this deeply impressive and pioneering book. While confirming that nations are modern and constructed, they show that ethnic histories across the world for the past two centuries are a major engine of border change. This tour de force should be read by anyone interested in the politics of nationalism, state formation, and state change.'

    Maya Tudor - Professor of Politics and Public Policy, Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford

    ‘… makes a fundamental contribution to the study of the development of the State.’

    Sabino Cassese Source: Il Sole 24 ORE Domenica

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    Contents

    • Frontmatter
      pp i-iv
    • Contents
      pp v-vii
    • Figures
      pp viii-xi
    • Tables
      pp xii-xiv
    • Preface
      pp xv-xviii
    • Introduction
      pp 1-14
    • Part I - Setting the Analytical Stage
      pp 15-16
    • 1 - Nationalism and the State in the Literature*
      pp 17-30
    • 2 - A Theory of Nationalist State Transformation
      pp 31-53
    • 3 - Operationalizing State-Nation Congruence
      pp 54-74
    • Part II - Nationalism and the Transformation of the State
      pp 75-78
    • 4 - War and State Formation in Early Modern Europe*
      pp 79-107
    • 5 - Nationalism and the Puzzle of Reversing State Size*
      pp 108-137
    • 6 - Shaping States into Nations*
      pp 138-154
    • Part III - Nationalist State Transformation and War
      pp 155-158
    • 7 - Nationality Questions and War*
      pp 159-180
    • 8 - Restorative Nationalism and War*
      pp 181-202
    • 9 - Railroads, Separatist Mobilization, and Conflict*
      pp 203-225
    • 10 - Nationalism, Right-Peopling, and Ethnic Cleansing*
      pp 226-242
    • Part IV - Policy Consequences: Toward Nationalist Geopolitics?
      pp 243-244
    • 11 - Conclusions for Research and Practice
      pp 245-272
    • S4 - War and State Formation in Early Modern Europe
      pp 273-283
    • S5 - Nationalism and the Puzzle of Reversing State Size
      pp 284-289
    • S6 - Shaping States into Nations
      pp 290-294
    • S7 - Nationality Questions and War
      pp 295-306
    • S8 - Restorative Nationalism and War
      pp 307-317
    • S9 - Railroads, Separatist Mobilization, and Conflict
      pp 318-327
    • S10 - Nationalism, “Right-Peopling,” and Ethnic Cleansing
      pp 328-333
    • References
      pp 334-364
    • Index
      pp 365-375

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