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Le nationalisme chinois aujourd'hui une approche géopolitique des sources chinoises /Ye, Ming Racine, Jean-Luc January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Reproduction de : Thèse de doctorat : Géopolitique : Paris 8 : 2006. / La version électronique de la thèse comporte quelques différences de mise en page par rapport à l'originale imprimée. Titre provenant de l'écran-titre. Bibliogr. p. 537-598. Notes bibliogr. Index.
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L'état-nation et la supranationalité européenne en droit constitutionnel françaisNoblecourt, Virginie. Pierré-Caps, Stéphane January 2002 (has links) (PDF)
Thèse de doctorat : Droit public : Nancy 2 : 2002. / Bibliographie.
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Du paysage de l'un à l'autre du paysage. Discours du paysage, pouvoir et identité(s) en Colombie au 19ème siècleColin, Philippe Gomez, Thomas. January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Thèse de doctorat : Langues et littératures romanes : Espagnol : Paris 10 : 2009. / Titre provenant de l'écran-titre.
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Critiquing the nation, creating the citizen : a century of educational discourse in Venezuela.Sellin, Amy L. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Brown University, 2008. / Vita. Advisor : Julio Ortega. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 202-205).
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Devlet, terörizm ve ülke bölücülüğü devlet içinde çeşitli açılardan terörizm ile ülke bölücülüğü suçu /Akbulut, İlhan. January 1990 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--İstanbul Üniversitesi, 1988. / At head of title: İstanbul Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü. Summary in English. Includes bibliographical references (p. 190-202).
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Race, development, and national identity in PanamaFlores-Villalobos, Joan V. 02 August 2012 (has links)
After reversion of Canal ownership from the U.S. to Panama in 1999, the construction of Panamanian national identity became deeply tied to notions of development. This thesis explores how the discourse of development is created, circulated and negotiated through important Panamanian cultural institutions. It shows how race and raced bodies became the dominant site for the negotiation of Panamanian national identity in the post-Reversion era. This discourse of development promotes the “myth of mestizaje”—a myth that the nation is homogeneous and without racial difference. Through the example of Panama, we perceive the cracks in the global notion of development as “common sense” and uniformly experienced. / text
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Myths of home and nation : conventions of Victorian domestic melodrama in O'Casey, Osborne, and PinterKim, Dasan 31 October 2013 (has links)
This dissertation demonstrates that twentieth-century dramas by Sean O'Casey, John Osborne, and Harold Pinter continue the convention of nineteenth-century domestic drama. From the expressionist movement, theatre of the absurd, and theatre of anger, to the theatre of extremes, diverse theatrical experiments in the twentieth century urged critics to focus on the contemporary theatrical effort to break away from convention. Consequently, critics have often emphasized the disconnectedness of the twentieth-century avant-garde theatre from nineteenth-century conventions, especially from the tradition of the well-made drawing room drama. My thesis focuses on the trajectory of the nineteenth-century domestic melodrama. Despite the seeming disconnection, nineteenth-century domestic melodrama still lurks within political theatre in the twentieth century as a cultural inheritance. This study argues that the aforementioned twentieth-century playwrights participate in political critique through the discourse of domesticity. Despite the geographical and temporal differences, the characters in the plays all struggle in the absence of communal integrity or national consensus. They suffer from war trauma, from disillusioned nationhood, from abuses of power, and from fascist violence. In addressing the fractured nationhood, these playwrights reference the Victorian perceptions of the home, the mother, and the nation. While the Victorian discourse of domesticity celebrated the idea of the home as a non-material, sacred haven and admired female virtue in support of patriarchal/national stability, Victorian domestic dramas displayed the anxieties surrounding domesticity. This dissertation examines how the twentieth-century plays considered here enhance the vision of late nineteenth-century domestic drama and exploit the myths of the home, the woman and the nation. / text
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The history of black nationalism and internal factors that prevented the founding of an independent black nation-state.Fleming, Kenyatta Jay 01 January 2008 (has links)
This thesis examined the political history of Black Nationalism in America in order to determine those internal organizational factors that have prevented Black Nationalists, specifically of the Black Power Era (1 966-1 975), from achieving selfdetermination, with the highest expression being the founding of an independent Black nation-state. The study was based on the premise that the goal of Black Nationalism was the founding of a Black nation-state for African-Americans. A historical comparative analysis was used to determine what internal factors prevented Black Nationalists from successfully founding a Black nation-state. The researcher found several internal factors that interfered with the founding of a Black nation-state. Factors which contributed to the unsuccessful movement were the immaturity of Black Nationalist leadership, the abandonment of political programs, shifts 1 in program strategies, and the antagonism and neglect of the Black Church as an ally in the movement. The conclusion drawn from the findings suggest that there are other internal factors which need further exploration.
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Chasing the Raven: Practices of Sovereignty in Non-State NationsMcCormack, Jennifer January 2014 (has links)
This dissertation examines 'sovereignty' as not only a theoretical abstraction of power relations within finite territories, but also as a very alive practice, a daily defense of inherent rights based on Indigenous philosophical notions of power and space. I examine the perspectives of Indigenous practitioners who either through their conversations and/or life ways cultivate an original conception of sovereignty, specifically the governance of the Gwich'in people, a nation of 15 villages in the Arctic Circle. As an Indigenous nation living within legal structures of a settler state, they offer an alternative understanding of collective political power, rooted outside the western European paradigm but simultaneously confronting those ambits. I argue that rather than an alternative narrative of resistance towards secession or segregation, the Gwich'in Nation provide a viable, pro-active and realized form of co-existent sovereignty. This sovereignty is a form of political collective identity and a relationship with the environment and non-human actors, as well as other governments, that is productive, creative and focused as much on future generations as drawing from tradition.
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Negotiating nation-states: North American geographies of culture and capitalismSparke, Matthew 11 1900 (has links)
The nation-state has for a long time appeared to have eluded the attempts of
scholars to encapsulate its essence in theory. Rather than propose another
attempt at encapsulation, this dissertation represents a form of geographical
supplementation to these efforts. As a work of geography it focuses on the
negotiation of nation-states, and, in doing so, traces a double displacement of
encapsulation. Primarily, the four major studies comprising the dissertation
represent geographical research which, using a wide range of archival and
contemporary media material, makes manifest the irreducible complexity of
the negotiations in, over and between nation-states at the end of the
twentieth century. Focused on Canada and the USA, these studies trace how
a diversity of cultural as well as political-economic processes come together in
the inherently geographical negotiations of First Nations struggles, Canadian
constitutional politics, continental free trade developments, and American
patriotism. These are negotiations where no one process fully encapsulates
an explanation of the events and where their collective but contested
territorialization calls out for an open-ended and anti-essentialist analysis.
Secondarily, while the dissertation's first and more central work of
displacement is enabled by poststructuralist critiques of essentialist
explanation, its other displacing effect comes in the form of a geographical
deconstruction of so-called poststructuralist theory itself. This represents an
attempt to turn the elusive nature of the nation-state vis-a-vis theory into a
living and politicized site for investigating the limits of poststructuralist
theorizing. Overall, the geographical investigations of the dissertation
illustrate the value of anti-essentialist arguments for furthering geographical
research into the nation-state while simultaneously calling these
epistemological innovations into geographical question. Using such
questioning to critique the limited geographical representation of the nationstate,
it is concluded that geographers cannot not persistently examine such
limits.
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