Territorial Disputes and Nationalism: A Comparative Case Study of China and Vietnam

In autocracies, nationalism appears to have merged with geopolitical thinking. In light of this geopoliticisation of nationalism, it is surprising that the literature has paid virtually no attention to the role of territorial disputes as a conditioning factor. The present study seeks to further enha...

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Main Author: Hannah Cotillon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-04-01
Series:Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/186810341703600103
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spelling doaj-781558594246497a86240e30d2687aeb2020-11-25T04:01:30ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs1868-10341868-48822017-04-013610.1177/186810341703600103Territorial Disputes and Nationalism: A Comparative Case Study of China and VietnamHannah Cotillon0London School of Economics and Political Science.In autocracies, nationalism appears to have merged with geopolitical thinking. In light of this geopoliticisation of nationalism, it is surprising that the literature has paid virtually no attention to the role of territorial disputes as a conditioning factor. The present study seeks to further enhance the field by factoring in the role of territorial disputes in triggering different expressions of nationalism. It develops an analytical framework for typologies of nationalism according to four territorial disputes: China's dispute with Vietnam over maritime territory in the South China Sea, China's dispute with Japan over maritime territory in the East China Sea, Vietnam's dispute with Cambodia over territorial border demarcations, and Vietnam's dispute with China over maritime territory in the South China Sea. The respective disputes of China and Vietnam are analysed and tested against criteria of expressions of nationalism in autocracies. We find that territorial disputes and therefore external context are important conditioning factors of nationalism in autocracies.https://doi.org/10.1177/186810341703600103
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hannah Cotillon
spellingShingle Hannah Cotillon
Territorial Disputes and Nationalism: A Comparative Case Study of China and Vietnam
Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs
author_facet Hannah Cotillon
author_sort Hannah Cotillon
title Territorial Disputes and Nationalism: A Comparative Case Study of China and Vietnam
title_short Territorial Disputes and Nationalism: A Comparative Case Study of China and Vietnam
title_full Territorial Disputes and Nationalism: A Comparative Case Study of China and Vietnam
title_fullStr Territorial Disputes and Nationalism: A Comparative Case Study of China and Vietnam
title_full_unstemmed Territorial Disputes and Nationalism: A Comparative Case Study of China and Vietnam
title_sort territorial disputes and nationalism: a comparative case study of china and vietnam
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs
issn 1868-1034
1868-4882
publishDate 2017-04-01
description In autocracies, nationalism appears to have merged with geopolitical thinking. In light of this geopoliticisation of nationalism, it is surprising that the literature has paid virtually no attention to the role of territorial disputes as a conditioning factor. The present study seeks to further enhance the field by factoring in the role of territorial disputes in triggering different expressions of nationalism. It develops an analytical framework for typologies of nationalism according to four territorial disputes: China's dispute with Vietnam over maritime territory in the South China Sea, China's dispute with Japan over maritime territory in the East China Sea, Vietnam's dispute with Cambodia over territorial border demarcations, and Vietnam's dispute with China over maritime territory in the South China Sea. The respective disputes of China and Vietnam are analysed and tested against criteria of expressions of nationalism in autocracies. We find that territorial disputes and therefore external context are important conditioning factors of nationalism in autocracies.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/186810341703600103
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