Nationalism and Crisis

Nationalism seems a persistent ideology in academia as much as in politics; despite the fact that it has been shown that nationalism is deeply unjust for minorities. A case for national identity is often invoked to supplement liberalism regarding the inner difficulties that liberal theories have to...

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Main Author: Enrique Camacho
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad Panamericana 2016-12-01
Series:Tópicos
Subjects:
Online Access:http://topicosojs.up.edu.mx/ojs/index.php/topicos/article/view/836
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spelling doaj-284c4c7fdf4e4553b24b4c4a157af21a2020-11-25T03:11:12ZspaUniversidad PanamericanaTópicos0188-66492007-84982016-12-0105242745610.21555/top.v0i52.836757Nationalism and CrisisEnrique Camacho0Instituto de Investigaciones FilosóficasNationalism seems a persistent ideology in academia as much as in politics; despite the fact that it has been shown that nationalism is deeply unjust for minorities. A case for national identity is often invoked to supplement liberalism regarding the inner difficulties that liberal theories have to explain their membership, assure stability and produce endorsement. So it seems that national identity may  also be required for justice. While this controversy continues, I argue that a different approach is available. We can define a conception of legitimacy independently from a conception of justice, and then ask what legitimacy requires from our national allegiances. If everything goes well, much of the controversy from justice disappears as we find that the case for cultural nationalism may be illegitimate for liberal democracies.http://topicosojs.up.edu.mx/ojs/index.php/topicos/article/view/836nationalismdistributive justicelegitimacypolitical self-determinationminority rightsmajority rights
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Enrique Camacho
spellingShingle Enrique Camacho
Nationalism and Crisis
Tópicos
nationalism
distributive justice
legitimacy
political self-determination
minority rights
majority rights
author_facet Enrique Camacho
author_sort Enrique Camacho
title Nationalism and Crisis
title_short Nationalism and Crisis
title_full Nationalism and Crisis
title_fullStr Nationalism and Crisis
title_full_unstemmed Nationalism and Crisis
title_sort nationalism and crisis
publisher Universidad Panamericana
series Tópicos
issn 0188-6649
2007-8498
publishDate 2016-12-01
description Nationalism seems a persistent ideology in academia as much as in politics; despite the fact that it has been shown that nationalism is deeply unjust for minorities. A case for national identity is often invoked to supplement liberalism regarding the inner difficulties that liberal theories have to explain their membership, assure stability and produce endorsement. So it seems that national identity may  also be required for justice. While this controversy continues, I argue that a different approach is available. We can define a conception of legitimacy independently from a conception of justice, and then ask what legitimacy requires from our national allegiances. If everything goes well, much of the controversy from justice disappears as we find that the case for cultural nationalism may be illegitimate for liberal democracies.
topic nationalism
distributive justice
legitimacy
political self-determination
minority rights
majority rights
url http://topicosojs.up.edu.mx/ojs/index.php/topicos/article/view/836
work_keys_str_mv AT enriquecamacho nationalismandcrisis
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