Image for Nationalist violence in postwar Europe

Nationalist violence in postwar Europe

See all formats and editions

This book argues that nationalist violence in developed countries is the product of unresponsive political elites and nationalists blocked from attracting supporters through legal channels.

Political elites are prone to ignoring a regional polity when their clout in that region is negligible and they do not rely on the region's support to maintain their positions of power.

Conversely, when nationalists cannot make inroads through legal channels, incentives for violence are ripe.

Thus, when nationalists in postwar Europe found elites unresponsive, it was state repression that helped radicals build a new group of support around militant action.

The larger this new constituency legitimizing violence grew, the longer the conflict lasted.

The book elucidates this complex dynamic through a deft combination of theoretical modeling, statistical methods and comparative case studies from the Basque Country, Catalonia, Corsica, Northern Ireland, Sardinia and Wales.

Read More
Price on Application:
Contact us for further details
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
131635489X / 9781316354896
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
29/07/2015
England
English
275 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.