First published 2000 by Ashgate Publishing
Published 2016 by Routledge
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Copyright Louk Hagendoorn, Gyrgy Csepeli, Henk Dekker, Russell Farnen 2000
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
European nations and nationalism: theoretical and
historical perspectives. - (Research in migration and
ethnic relations series)
1. Nationalism - Europe 2. Racism - Europe
I. Hagendoorn, Louk, 1945
320.5'4'094
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 99-75544
ISBN 13: 978-0-7546-1136-3 (hbk)
Irytta Bekeshkina is senior researcher at the Institute of Sociology, Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, Kyiv, Ukraine, She is deputy director of the Democratic Initiatives Foundation and lectures on public opinion polls. Her current research interests are societies in transition, political sociology, political behaviour, public opinion polls, and elections. Recent publications include The Structure of Personality (1996), Public Opinion and Economic Education of Ukraine's Population (1996, with co-authors), and The Political Portrait of Ukraine. Elections-98: Public Opinion and the Prospects of the Development of Ukraine (editor, 1998).
Vlastimil Cerny is head of the Department of International Relations, faculty of economics and management, Czech University of Agriculture, Prague, Czech Republic. A graduate of St. Petersburg State University's Faculty of Philosophy, he received his MA in International Business and Management at the University of Westminster. He coordinates various Czech University of Agriculture international projects.
Marco Cinnirella is a lecturer in psychology at Royal Holloway, University of London, London, UK. His research focuses on the social psychological study of public reactions to European integration, with emphasis on the degree to which British citizens are adopting or resisting a European identity. He has published articles on this as well as on social identity and the self-concept.
John Crowley is a research fellow at the Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches Internationales of the Fondation Nationale des Sciences Politiques, Paris, France. He lectures in politics at several Paris institutions. His research focuses on the political theory and sociology of the contemporary state, with particular emphasis on immigration. Recent publications include 'The National Dimension of Citizenship in T. H. Marshall' in Citizenship Studies (1998) and 'Elusive Solidarity in the French Welfare State' in Soundings (1998).
Gyrgy Csepeli chairs the Department of Social Psychology, Institute of Sociology, Etvs Lornd University, Budapest, Hungary. His research focuses on social psychology of intergroup relations, anti-Semitism, and comparative sociological investigation of national identity. Recent publications include National Identity in Contemporary Hungary (1997), and Szocilpszicholgia (1997).
Hans De Witte is head of Labour Sector, the Higher Institute of Labour Studies, Katholieke Universiteit, Leuven, Belgium and staff member of the Centre of Community Psychology there. His research fields include racism and right-wing extremism, working class culture, class consciousness, psychological consequences of unemployment, and trade union participation. Recently he edited How to Fight Racism and Right-wing Extremism? Scientific Contributions to the Debate in Society (1997) and co-edited The Lost Perspective? Trade Unions Between Ideology and Social Action in the New Europe (1996).
Henk Dekker is associate professor of political science at Leiden University, the Netherlands; occupies the endowed chair to study Germany-Netherlands relationships at Utrecht University; and lectures on political science at Utrecht University College, the Netherlands. He chairs the Research Committee on Political Socialization and Political Education of the International Political Science Association. His research focusses on explanations for national and international political orientations and behaviours (including voting, national identity, national stereotypes, and nationalism). He has co-edited and contributed to Democracy, Socialization and Conflicting Loyalties in East and West (1996) and Duitsland in Beeld (Images of Germany) (1997).
Nadya V. Djintcharadze lectures in the Department of Psychology, Moscow State University, Russia and is as an organizational psychologist. Her research interest include organizational diagnostics, motivation, and educational alternatives. Recent publications include 'Human Rights in Contemporary Russia' and 'Psychological Types and Political Preferences' (co-authored), both appearing in Russian Monitor: The Archives of Contemporary Politics (1992).
Russell F. Farnen is a professor of political science at the University of Connecticut (Hartford/Storrs), US. His academic specialties include mass media and politics, national defence, and cross-national political socialization. Between 1990 and 1997, he chaired the Research Committee for Political Socialization and Education of the International Political Science Association (IPSA). He presented numerous papers at international conferences and authored and/or edited many articles and books. Recently, he published Nationalism, Ethnicity, and Identity (1994), Democracy, Socialization, and Conflicting Loyalties in East and West: Cross-national and Comparative Perspectives (1996), Politics, Sociology, and Economics of Education: Interdisciplinary and Comparative Perspectives (1997), and co-authored The Authoritarian Personality Revisited (1999, forthcoming). He is managing editor of Politics, Groups, and the Individual (International Journal of Political Psychology and Political Socialization).
Louk Hagendoorn chairs the European Research Centre on Migration and Ethnic Relations at Utrecht University in the Netherlands. His research focuses on the social psychology of intergroup relations, political psychology, and cross-cultural studies. Recent publications include co-authoring Racism and Education (1999) and The Perception of Russians (1999, forthcoming).
Aleksandra Jasinska-Kania is a professor of sociology and head of general sociology chair at the Department of Philosophy and Sociology, Warsaw University, Poland. Her research interests include comparative studies in systems of values, national identity, nationalism, and ethnic stereotypes. Recently, she co-edited Nation, Power, Society (1996), wrote 'The Systemic Transformation and Changes in Poles' Attitudes Towards Various Nations and States' in The Polish Sociological Bulletin (1991), and co-authored 'Poland' in B. Jacob et al. (eds.) Democracy and Local Governance: Ten Empirical Studies (1993).