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  2. Where nation-states come from: institutional change in the age of nationalism

Where nation-states come from: institutional change in the age of nationalism

Philip G. Roeder c2007 © Princeton University Press
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ISBN(s)
  • 9780691134673 (paper)
  • 9781400842964 (ebook)
  • 9780691127286 (hardcover)
Subject
  • European: Russia & Eastern
Citable Link
  • Table of Contents

  • Reviews

  • Stats

  • Frontmatter
  • List of Figures (page vii)
  • List of Tables (page ix)
  • Acknowledgments (page xi)
  • PART ONE THE INSTITUTIONAL ORIGINS OF NATION-STATES
    • ONE Who Gets a State of Their Own? (page 3)
    • TWO Varieties of Segmented States (page 42)
  • PART TWO PROCESSES: FORGING POLITICAL-IDENTITY HEGEMONIES
    • THREE Hegemonies and Segment-State Machines (page 81)
    • FOUR Creating Identity Hegemony (page 108)
    • FIVE Conditions for Political-Identity Hegemony (page 136)
  • PART THREE PROCESSES: ESCALATION TO NATION-STATE CRISES
    • SIX The Dynamics of Nation-State Crises (page 163)
    • SEVEN The Segmental Agenda and Escalation of Stakes (page 203)
    • EIGHT Escalation of Means in Nation-State Crises (page 229)
  • PART FOUR OUTCOMES: CRISES AND INDEPENDENCE
    • NINE Which Nation-State Projects Create Crises? (page 259)
    • TEN Which Segment-States Become Nation-States? (page 290)
    • ELEVEN Nation-States and the International System (page 341)
    • APPENDIX Segment-States, 1901-2000 (page 355)
  • References (page 365)
  • Index (page 403)
Reviews
Journal AbbreviationLabelURL
PoP 8.1 (Mar. 2010): 388-389 http://www.jstor.org/stable/25698594
JP 71.1 (Jan. 2009): 362-363 http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1017/S0022381608090294
WP 65.2 (Apr. 2013): 350-381 http://www.jstor.org/stable/42002210
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