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National identity and xenophobia in an ethnically divided society
Lugar de publicación | Año de publicación | compilación: 
Paris | 2005 | p. 90-118
Autor: 
Noah Lewin Epstein; Asaf Levanon
Autor corporativo: 
International Journal on Multiculutral Societies (IJMS)
Región: 
Global

Recent studies have suggested that national identity is empirically related to negative sentiments of individuals towards foreigners. This type of analysis has hitherto been based on the notion that xenophobia is shaped by the specific nature of national identity in a given society. Representing a stronger and more exclusive perception of national identity, ethnic national identity (compared with civic national identity) is expected in this line of research to result in less favourable perceptions of immigrants. In this paper we expand this approach by arguing that, in deeply divided societies, national identity itself may have different meanings among different social groups.

Tipo de recurso: 
Documentos de investigación / artículos de revistas
Tema: 
Diversidad / alfabetización cultural / inclusiva
Derechos humanos
Globalización y justicia social / Entendimiento internacional
Palabras claves: 
xenophobia
nationalism
civic education
human rights
intercultural