Rethinking Sovereignty. Independence-lite, devolutionmax and national accommodation

National self-determination does not necessarily entail independence. Many nationality movements in Europe have historically called for a continued association with the host state. Non-nationalist parties, in turn, have often embraced various forms of devolution. This has opened up a middle ground,...

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Main Author: Michael Keating
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Institut d'Estudis de l'Autogovern 2012-10-01
Series:Revista d'Estudis Autonòmics i Federals
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www20.gencat.cat/docs/governacio/IEA/documents/publicacions/reaf/2012/16/Arxius%20REAF%2016/_reaf16_Keating.pdf
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spelling doaj-f0579d71c26f492286e56e3fe7204d2c2021-03-02T08:58:56ZcatInstitut d'Estudis de l'AutogovernRevista d'Estudis Autonòmics i Federals1886-26322012-10-0116929Rethinking Sovereignty. Independence-lite, devolutionmax and national accommodationMichael KeatingNational self-determination does not necessarily entail independence. Many nationality movements in Europe have historically called for a continued association with the host state. Non-nationalist parties, in turn, have often embraced various forms of devolution. This has opened up a middle ground, in the form of ‘independence-lite’ or ‘devolution max’, which would givenations control of most domestic policy. Proposals on these lines have been put forward in Quebec, Catalonia, the Basque Country and Scotland. These would allow stateless nations to strike distinct social and economic compromises. They would not give them control over the levers of macro-economic policy. They would entail a bilateral relationship with the state. Such proposals have not found favour with state majorities, and recent debates have been characterized by rather traditional assertions of sovereignty at oddswith our interdependent world.http://www20.gencat.cat/docs/governacio/IEA/documents/publicacions/reaf/2012/16/Arxius%20REAF%2016/_reaf16_Keating.pdfself-determinationdevolutionindependencenationalism
collection DOAJ
language Catalan
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Keating
spellingShingle Michael Keating
Rethinking Sovereignty. Independence-lite, devolutionmax and national accommodation
Revista d'Estudis Autonòmics i Federals
self-determination
devolution
independence
nationalism
author_facet Michael Keating
author_sort Michael Keating
title Rethinking Sovereignty. Independence-lite, devolutionmax and national accommodation
title_short Rethinking Sovereignty. Independence-lite, devolutionmax and national accommodation
title_full Rethinking Sovereignty. Independence-lite, devolutionmax and national accommodation
title_fullStr Rethinking Sovereignty. Independence-lite, devolutionmax and national accommodation
title_full_unstemmed Rethinking Sovereignty. Independence-lite, devolutionmax and national accommodation
title_sort rethinking sovereignty. independence-lite, devolutionmax and national accommodation
publisher Institut d'Estudis de l'Autogovern
series Revista d'Estudis Autonòmics i Federals
issn 1886-2632
publishDate 2012-10-01
description National self-determination does not necessarily entail independence. Many nationality movements in Europe have historically called for a continued association with the host state. Non-nationalist parties, in turn, have often embraced various forms of devolution. This has opened up a middle ground, in the form of ‘independence-lite’ or ‘devolution max’, which would givenations control of most domestic policy. Proposals on these lines have been put forward in Quebec, Catalonia, the Basque Country and Scotland. These would allow stateless nations to strike distinct social and economic compromises. They would not give them control over the levers of macro-economic policy. They would entail a bilateral relationship with the state. Such proposals have not found favour with state majorities, and recent debates have been characterized by rather traditional assertions of sovereignty at oddswith our interdependent world.
topic self-determination
devolution
independence
nationalism
url http://www20.gencat.cat/docs/governacio/IEA/documents/publicacions/reaf/2012/16/Arxius%20REAF%2016/_reaf16_Keating.pdf
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