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Encyclopedia > Irredentist

Irredentism is claiming a right to territories belonging to another state on the grounds of common ethnicity and/or prior historical possession, actual or alleged. The word was coined in Italy from the phrase Italia irredenta ("unredeemed Italy"). This originally referred to Austro-Hungarian rule over mostly or partly Italian-inhabited territories in the northern Adriatic such as Trentino and Trieste during the 19th and early 20th century. An area subjected to an irredentist claim is therefore sometimes called an irredenta.


Irredentist disputes

Not all territorial disputes are irredentist, although they are often couched in irredentist terms to strengthen public support.


Other prominent irredentist disputes have included:

"Triadic nexus" of irredenta conflict

In his 1996 book, Nationalism Reframed, Rogers Brubaker outlined a pattern to describe a common theme of irredentist conflict, referred to as the "triadic nexus".


Irredenta conflict is a conflict between three parties: a nationalizing state, a national movement representing an ethnic minority within that state, and an external national homeland, to which that minority is construed as ethnically belonging. Brubaker's triadic nexus is a visual representation of this, granting each party a corner of the triangle. The implication is that the national minority is caught between the nationalizing state within whose borders it exists, and the external homeland to which it is seen as belonging.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Irredentism — www.greenwood.com (243 words)
During the Cold War, irredentist projects were largely subordinated to the ideological struggle between East and West.
His central argument is that irredentist states confront two potentially contradictory forces: domestic nationalism and pressure from the international community.
Irredentist leaders are forced to reconcile their nationalist policies with pressures from the international plane.
Irredentism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1107 words)
A common way to express a claim to adjacent territories on the grounds of historical or ethnic association is by using the epithet "Greater" before the country name, as in Greater Serbia, Greater Albania or Greater Morocco.
Not all territorial disputes are irredentist, although they are often couched in irredentist rhetoric to legitimize such claims both internationally and within the country.
The implication is that the national minority is caught between the nationalizing state within whose borders it exists, and the external homeland to which it is seen as belonging.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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