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Do people’s political beliefs alter the emphasis they place on different symbols when constructing their “personal” national identity (Cohen 1996)? Does the content of their national identity affect how they vote? These are the central questions we address in this article, focusing on England but using the United States as a comparative case to demonstrate common dynamics.
This chapter argues that ethnic majorities are set to occupy an increasingly central place in discussions of ethno-political accommodation in western societies. These actors are not well captured by the liberal nationalism or multiculturalism paradigms, which were developed during a period of relative ethnic homogeneity. Ethnic majorities are, in my estimation, advantaged in politics, the economy and in official culture; but are disadvantaged when it comes to recognition of their ethnic identity and demographic malaise, criticism of their collective past, and the treatment of national symbols and narratives that are implicitly associated with them. An increasingly influential cultural left has sought to anathematize majority ethnic groups, which has contributed to populism and polarization as well as silencing important conversations. The cultural left has also engaged in a fallacy of composition by collapsing the distinction between majority group concern over the preservation of ethno-traditions with ethnic exclusion at the individual level. It has celebrated majority decline, producing profound alienation. In combination, this has prevented the recognition of liberal, absorptive ethnic majorities, contributing to our current moment in both political and intellectual terms.
Immigration is highly salient for voters in Europe and the USA and has generated considerable academic debate about the causes of preferences over immigration. This debate centers around the relative influences of sociotropic or personal economic considerations, as well as noneconomic threats. We provide a test of the competing egocentric, sociotropic, and noneconomic paradigms using a novel constrained preference experiment in which respondents are asked to trade off preferred reductions in immigration levels with realistic estimates of the personal or societal costs associated with those reductions. This survey experiment, performed on a national sample of British YouGov panelists, allows us to measure the price-elasticity of the publicʼs preferences with regard to levels of European and non-European immigration. Respondents were willing to admit more immigrants when restriction carries economic costs, with egocentric considerations as important as sociotropic ones. People who voted for the UK to Leave the European Union in the 2016 referendum are less price-elastic than those voting Remain, indicating that noneconomic concerns are also important.1
Sami Zubaida's Law and Power in the Islamic World is a fascinating politico-social history of the relations between Islamic law and the procession of political masters who have ruled the Middle East since the Prophet's death. One message is clear: the notion of an omnipotent shariءa, passed from caliph to caliph for fourteen centuries, is a myth held by both Islamist radicals and their Western critics.
Like other voluntary associations, fraternities such as the Orange Order underpin political cleavages. The membership dynamics behind such associations are less clear. Rival theories attribute membership fluctuations alternatively to changes in social capital, economic structure, culture, or events. This article uses a pooled time-series cross sectional model to evaluate competing hypotheses for the period since 1860. Results suggest that membership was linked to longer-term shifts in ethnic boundaries rather than structural or social capital variables, with events playing an intermediate role. Scottish Protestant mobilization against Catholics was less important than Irish Protestant ethnicity, but both were key. Finally, the order has been numerically weaker than many believe; hence its inability—even during the apex of its influence—to shape Tory policy.
Perhaps the most vexing problem in philosophy and social
theory concerns the relative importance of material and ideal factors
for social action. Karl Marx, for instance, with his notion of base
and superstructure and his materialistic interpretation of the
dialectic process, made a clean break from the idealism of his
Hegelian heritage (McLellan 1977:390; Swingewood 1991:62–63).
Nevertheless, idealism proved resilient and later came to inform
the thinking of both actor-oriented (that is, phenomenologist,
ethnomethodologist, symbolic interactionist) and structure-oriented
(that is Functionalist, Structuralist) theorists.
The history of nativism in the United States has received considerable
scholarly attention, yet the few systematic attempts to explain it have
focused predominantly on psychological or economic causes. This article
asserts that such explanations fail to address the crucial cultural dimension
of the nativism issue, which must be analyzed through the prism of
historical sociology. Specifically, this article argues that American nativism
cannot be understood without reference to an “American” national
ethnic group whose myth–symbol complex had developed prior to the
large-scale immigration of the mid-nineteenth century. Without understanding
this social construction, it is difficult to explain subsequent
attempts to defend it. This article, therefore, does not seek to retrace the
history of American nativism. Instead, it focuses on the period prior to
1850, when American nativism was in its infancy. It examines the
development of an Anglo-American ethnicity during 1776–1850 and
attempts to delineate its structure. This “American” complex of myths
and symbols, with its attendant set of life-style images and narratives, is
shown to conform to more generally models recently presented by
theorists of ethnicity and nationalism. Finally, it is argued that American
nativism may have exhibited a very different pattern if an “American”
national ethnicity had not taken root.
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