The precarious future of national sovereignty / von Arjun Appadurai New York University, New York/N.Y.
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Discovery
1030865604
URN
urn:nbn:de:gbv:3:2-96849
DOI
ISBN
ISSN
Autorin / Autor
Beiträger
Körperschaft
Erschienen
Halle (Saale) : Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg, 2017
Umfang
1 Online-Ressource (27 Seiten, 0,13 MB)
Ausgabevermerk
Sprache
eng
ger
ger
Anmerkungen
Text in englischer, Vorwort in deutscher Sprache
Inhaltliche Zusammenfassung
National sovereignty today operates in changed ecology. The primary reason for this is the erosion of national borders by the flows of ideas, people, technologies and money across national boundaries which has accelerated since the late 1980’s, in what is usually referred to as the period of globalization. In addition, as national economies have become increasingly fictions due to the realities of global finance, nation-states and political elites have had to invent other justifications for their existence and this accounts for the global shift to right-wing ideologies of soil, blood and ethnos. Finally, as the tension between universal human rights and the plight of refugees and other undocumented aliens increases, especially in Europe, we see the emergence of a deep divide about the meaning of national sovereignty, and a gap between ethnonational views and those of a more liberal variety, which stress inclusion, diversity and hospitality. More than three centuries after the Treaty of Westphalia, Europe (and the world) are in dire need of a new narrative of sovereignty.
Schriftenreihe
Anton Wilhelm Amo lectures ; Volume 3 ppn:1030840490