All Concepts
Democracy & Government

Nationalism

What nationalism is, how it has shaped the modern world, when it has united people and when it has led to violence, and how to tell healthy patriotism from dangerous nationalism.

Core Ideas
1 It is good to love your home and your country
2 It is also good to be interested in other places and other people
3 Everyone feels proud of where they come from
4 Different does not mean worse
5 We can care about our own country and care about other people too
Background for Teachers

Young children can begin to understand the ideas behind healthy belonging and its risks through simple experiences of home, family, and community. The core instincts to build are: it is good to love your home and your country; it is also good to be curious about other places; people from other countries are not enemies; different does not mean bad. Children do not need the word 'nationalism'. But they can begin to feel that loving their own place and respecting other places both fit together. This matters because nationalism has been one of the most powerful forces in modern history — and has produced both the positive sense of belonging that makes democracy possible and the hostility that has driven wars and atrocities. Building the habit of 'love your place AND respect others' is the foundation of healthy citizenship. No materials are needed.

Classroom Activities
Activity 1 — What I love about where I am from
PurposeChildren share what they love about their home and country.
How to run itAsk: what do you love about where you come from? Your town, your city, your country? Collect answers. Prompts: the food, family, the landscape, a festival, a language, music, stories, a game. Celebrate each answer. Explain: most people love the place where they grew up. It is part of who we are. Loving your own place is a good thing. Ask: now, is someone else's love for their place just as real as yours? Yes. A child from a different country loves their place too, for the same reasons — their family, their food, their stories. This does not make your place less. It means that love of home is something people everywhere share.
💡 Low-resource tipDiscussion only. No materials needed.
Activity 2 — Different places, different ways
PurposeChildren develop curiosity about other countries and cultures.
How to run itTell the class briefly about a different country — its food, its music, its geography, its stories. Choose one far from the students' own country. Ask: what sounds interesting? What sounds different? What sounds the same as here? Discuss: every country has something to teach. Learning about other places does not make us love our own place less. It makes the world bigger. People who have never learned about other countries often think their way is the only right way — but there are many good ways of living. Ask: what other country would you like to learn about? What would you like to know?
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher chooses any country and shares briefly. Discussion only.
Activity 3 — Friends from other places
PurposeChildren understand that people from other countries are potential friends.
How to run itTell or read a simple story about two children from different countries becoming friends. They discover that although their languages, food, and homes are different, they both love games, both have families, and both have dreams. They learn from each other and help each other. Ask: what makes friendship possible? Do you need to speak the same language to be friends? Do you need to be from the same place? Discuss: friendship across differences is one of the most beautiful things in the world. When people meet, even from very different backgrounds, they usually find many things they share. People who have only heard scary stories about other countries sometimes feel afraid. Actually meeting someone is almost always the cure for that fear.
💡 Low-resource tipTell the story verbally. No materials needed.
Discussion Questions
  • Q1What do you love about where you come from?
  • Q2Have you ever met someone from a different country? What did you learn?
  • Q3Is it okay for other people to love their country as much as you love yours?
  • Q4Does loving your home mean you cannot love other places too?
  • Q5What is a question you would like to ask someone from far away?
Writing Tasks
Drawing task
Draw a picture of something you love about where you come from. Write or say: I love ___________. Someone from a different country would love ___________ about their home too.
Skills: Celebrating home while recognising that others love their own homes
Sentence completion
Loving your country means ___________. It does not mean ___________.
Skills: Articulating healthy belonging
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

My country is the best, and others are worse.

What to teach instead

People in every country tend to feel their country is special — and in many ways, it is. But feeling that your country is best often just means you know yours better. People from other places feel the same about theirs. None of us sees our country from the outside. The most interesting view of the world comes from being curious about other places, not from deciding your own is simply best.

Common misconception

People from other countries are different from us in important ways.

What to teach instead

People around the world are much more alike than different. Everyone loves their families. Everyone wants to be safe. Everyone laughs and plays and has dreams. The differences are real but often smaller than they seem. When we meet people from other places, we almost always find much more in common than we expected.

Core Ideas
1 What nations and nationalism are
2 Civic vs ethnic nationalism
3 Nationalism and the modern world
4 The positive face — unity and self-determination
5 The dangerous face — exclusion and violence
6 Patriotism vs nationalism
Background for Teachers

A nation is a large group of people who share a sense of belonging — often through a common language, history, culture, or territory — and who usually see themselves as a political community with the right to govern themselves. Nationalism is the political idea that nations are real and important, that they should govern themselves (national self-determination), and that loyalty to the nation should be a central political commitment. The modern world is built on nationalism. The idea that the world should be organised into nation-states — countries where each nation has its own government — is relatively recent. Before the late 18th century, most of the world was organised into empires, kingdoms, and principalities, with very mixed populations. The American and French Revolutions (1776, 1789) helped establish the modern idea of the nation — a people with the right to govern themselves. Over the 19th and 20th centuries, nationalism reshaped the world.

Nationalism has two faces

Its positive face has been enormously important. It ended empires and gave peoples the right to rule themselves. It enabled democracy by creating shared political communities. It inspired freedom movements against colonialism across Asia, Africa, and the Americas. It created the sense of shared citizenship that makes public services, taxation, and collective action possible. Without some form of national belonging, modern democracy would be very hard to organise. Its dangerous face has been equally important. Aggressive nationalism was a major cause of both World Wars. Nationalist movements have produced ethnic cleansing and genocide — in the Armenian genocide, the Holocaust, the former Yugoslavia, Rwanda, and elsewhere. Nationalist governments have persecuted minorities, closed borders, and used national pride to attack other countries. The distinction between healthy and dangerous nationalism matters.

Two important distinctions

Civic nationalism defines the nation through shared political values and citizenship — anyone can become a member through commitment to the country's laws and values. Ethnic nationalism defines the nation through shared blood, ancestry, or ethnicity — membership is inherited, and outsiders cannot really belong. Civic nationalism is generally compatible with democracy and diversity; ethnic nationalism tends to produce exclusion and often violence. Patriotism and nationalism are often confused. Patriotism (from Latin 'patria', fatherland) is love of one's country. Nationalism is a political ideology that can include patriotism but often goes beyond it — claiming that one's nation is superior, that its interests override others, or that outsiders are a threat. The scholar George Orwell drew a clear distinction in his 1945 essay 'Notes on Nationalism': nationalism wants power and seeks enemies; patriotism is a personal attachment without the political aggression.

Modern context

The 21st century has seen a strong revival of nationalism in many countries. Hindu nationalism in India; Russian nationalism under Putin; nationalism in Turkey, Israel, Brazil, Hungary, and elsewhere; the rise of nationalist parties in Western Europe and the US. The forces driving this revival — economic insecurity, globalisation, immigration, cultural change — are real. But the political movements responding to them often carry real dangers.

Teaching note

This is a genuinely sensitive topic. Students often feel deep attachment to their country; this is healthy and should not be dismissed. The aim is to help them see both the legitimate value of national belonging and the historical reality that nationalism can become dangerous. The distinction between healthy patriotism and aggressive nationalism is useful and defensible.

Key Vocabulary
Nation
A large group of people who share a sense of belonging — often through common language, history, culture, or territory — and who see themselves as a political community.
Nationalism
The political idea that nations should govern themselves and that loyalty to the nation should be a central political commitment.
Nation-state
A country where most people belong to the same nation — the main form of political organisation in the modern world.
Patriotism
Love of one's country. Similar to nationalism but usually without the political claim that one's nation is superior to others.
Civic nationalism
A form of nationalism based on shared political values and citizenship — anyone can join by committing to the country's laws and values.
Ethnic nationalism
A form of nationalism based on shared blood, ancestry, or ethnicity — membership is inherited, and outsiders cannot really belong.
Self-determination
The right of a people to choose their own government. A key principle behind many independence movements.
Ethnic cleansing
The forced removal of an ethnic group from a territory — often through violence, intimidation, or massacre. Usually connected to extreme ethnic nationalism.
Classroom Activities
Activity 1 — Two faces of nationalism
PurposeStudents understand that nationalism can be positive or dangerous depending on its form.
How to run itPresent the two faces. Positive examples: India's independence movement (1947) — millions peacefully campaigned for freedom from British rule, drawing on a vision of Indian self-government. African independence movements after WWII — ending colonial rule across the continent. Solidarity in Poland (1980s) — a Polish national movement that helped bring down communist rule. Scottish and Welsh movements for devolution — seeking self-government within the UK through democratic means. Dangerous examples: Nazi Germany — nationalist ideology used to persecute and murder Jews, Roma, and others. The former Yugoslavia (1990s) — nationalist mobilisation leading to ethnic cleansing and genocide, especially in Bosnia. Rwanda (1994) — extreme Hutu nationalism led to the genocide of 800,000 Tutsi. Myanmar today — Buddhist nationalism used to justify the persecution of Rohingya Muslims. Ask: what is the difference between the positive and dangerous examples? Usually: positive nationalism is about self-government and independence — a people wanting to rule themselves. Dangerous nationalism is about exclusion and attack — defining some people as not really part of the nation and treating them as enemies. Discuss: both are called 'nationalism'. Telling the difference between them is one of the most important political skills.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents examples verbally. Students discuss. No materials needed.
Activity 2 — Patriotism or nationalism?
PurposeStudents learn to distinguish healthy patriotism from aggressive nationalism.
How to run itPresent a series of statements. For each, ask: is this patriotism (healthy love of country), or nationalism (something more aggressive)? (1) 'I love my country and I am proud of its history.' (2) 'I want to help make my country fairer and better.' (3) 'My country is the best in the world, and all others are worse.' (4) 'People who were not born in my country can never really belong here.' (5) 'My country has made mistakes in the past, and we should learn from them.' (6) 'Our problems are caused by outsiders — we need to close our borders.' (7) 'I want my children to know our traditions and feel connected to our history.' (8) 'Anyone who criticises our country is a traitor.' (9) 'We should be suspicious of people whose background is different from the majority here.' (10) 'Our country is part of a wider world, and we have responsibilities to others too.' Discuss each. Generally, statements 1, 2, 5, 7, and 10 are compatible with healthy patriotism. Statements 3, 4, 6, 8, and 9 are features of aggressive nationalism. The difference is whether love of country respects other people or uses pride as a weapon against them.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher reads statements verbally. Students respond. No materials needed.
Activity 3 — Why people turn to nationalism
PurposeStudents understand the real reasons that nationalist movements grow — and think about how to respond.
How to run itExplain that nationalism rarely comes from nowhere. It typically grows when people feel: (1) insecure — about their jobs, their futures, or their safety. (2) ignored by elites or governments. (3) that their culture or identity is being lost or disrespected. (4) that they have been wronged — by outsiders, by other groups, or by history. (5) afraid of change that seems too fast. Ask: are these feelings real? Are they understandable? Yes. People who feel this way are not stupid or evil. Discuss: the problem is not that people feel these things. The problem is how some leaders use these feelings — turning them against other groups, other countries, or minorities at home. Genuine responses include listening, addressing real problems (jobs, services, respect), and finding ways to include everyone. Hostile responses include finding enemies to blame. Ask: what can make a country feel like a place where everyone belongs — so that nationalism does not need to turn dangerous?
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents causes verbally. Students discuss. No materials needed.
Discussion Questions
  • Q1What is the difference between loving your country and thinking your country is better than others?
  • Q2Can someone be proud of their country while also being critical of things it has done wrong?
  • Q3Why do you think nationalism is growing in many countries today?
  • Q4How can people feel they belong to one country without treating people from other countries as enemies?
  • Q5Is it possible to love your country AND love the wider world? What would that look like?
  • Q6When has nationalism led to good things in history? When has it led to bad things?
Writing Tasks
Task 1 — Explain and give an example
Explain the difference between civic nationalism and ethnic nationalism. Give ONE example of each. Write 4 to 6 sentences.
Skills: Explaining two related concepts, distinguishing them, using examples
Task 2 — Short argument
Explain why it is possible to love your country and also respect other countries — and why this matters. Write 4 to 6 sentences.
Skills: Reasoning, balancing belonging and openness, understanding consequences
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Nationalism and patriotism are the same thing.

What to teach instead

They are related but not identical. Patriotism is love of one's country — a personal feeling of attachment. Nationalism is a political ideology that can include patriotism but often goes beyond it — claiming that one's nation is superior to others, that its interests come first, or that outsiders are a threat. Many patriots are not nationalists; they love their country without believing it is better than others. Confusing the two makes it hard to criticise dangerous nationalism without sounding like you are attacking love of country.

Common misconception

Being critical of your country's history means you do not love it.

What to teach instead

Most people who deeply love their country are willing to talk honestly about its mistakes. Refusing to acknowledge past wrongs is not love — it is fear. A parent who loves their child tells them honestly when they have made a mistake. A citizen who loves their country looks at its history clearly, celebrates its achievements, and honestly faces its failures. Whitewashed history is not patriotism; it is self-deception. Real love of country includes the desire to see it become better.

Common misconception

Immigrants and minorities cannot be full members of the nation.

What to teach instead

Civic nationalism holds that anyone who accepts the country's political values and laws can be a full member. Most modern democracies have this model. Successful countries have absorbed enormous numbers of immigrants over generations — including people whose descendants now say 'my country' about places where their family was once foreign. The claim that some residents can never 'really' belong is usually a form of ethnic nationalism, and it has historically been used to justify persecution and exclusion.

Common misconception

Nationalism is always a force for democracy and self-determination.

What to teach instead

Nationalism has been both. It gave us many successful independence movements and helped build modern democratic nation-states. But it has also produced two World Wars, multiple genocides, and ongoing persecution of minorities. Nationalism is a tool, not a single outcome. Whether it is used for self-determination or for attacking others depends on what kind of nationalism, what leaders, and what political conditions. Treating nationalism as always good — or always bad — misses this reality.

Core Ideas
1 The origins of modern nationalism
2 Civic vs ethnic nationalism — Kohn's distinction
3 Nationalism and the modern state
4 The two World Wars and nationalism
5 Anti-colonial nationalism
6 Ethnic cleansing and genocide
7 The 21st-century nationalist revival
8 Cosmopolitanism — the main alternative
Background for Teachers

Nationalism is one of the most powerful political forces of the modern era. Understanding its theoretical foundations and historical variations is essential for secondary teaching.

Origins

Modern nationalism is typically traced to the late 18th century. Before this, most of the world was organised into empires, kingdoms, and principalities with no assumption that rulers and ruled should share ethnic or cultural identity. The American (1776) and French (1789) Revolutions introduced the idea of sovereignty resting in 'the people' — a nation — rather than in dynasties. Benedict Anderson's influential 'Imagined Communities' (1983) argued that nations are 'imagined political communities' — imagined because members never know most of their fellow-members but feel an image of community; political because they aim at self-government; limited in scope because other nations exist; and communities because they are seen as deep horizontal comradeship. The print revolution (newspapers, standardised languages) enabled this imagination. Ernest Gellner ('Nations and Nationalism', 1983) argued that nationalism is not natural but a product of industrial society — which requires large numbers of people sharing a common literate culture. Eric Hobsbawm emphasised the 'invention of tradition' that characterises many apparently ancient national identities.

Civic vs ethnic nationalism

Hans Kohn's 1944 distinction, reshaped by later scholars, remains influential. Civic nationalism (Kohn's 'Western' form) defines the nation through political institutions, shared values, and citizenship. The US, France, and the UK are often cited. It is, in principle, open to newcomers who accept the civic terms. Ethnic nationalism (Kohn's 'Eastern' form) defines the nation through shared blood, ancestry, language, or religion. Germany (historically), Eastern European states, and many post-colonial states are often cited. It is closed: outsiders cannot become members. The distinction is a useful analytical tool but not a clean binary. Every real nationalism combines civic and ethnic elements in different proportions. The French Republic has civic foundations but has also faced ethnic exclusions. Germany has shifted significantly toward more civic citizenship. What matters is the balance in practice.

Nationalism and the modern state

The 19th century saw the rise of the nation-state as the dominant political form. Italy and Germany were unified. Latin American independence produced new national states. The collapse of the Ottoman, Austro-Hungarian, and Russian empires after WWI produced new states in Europe. Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points (1918) made national self-determination a key principle of the post-war order. The League of Nations and later the UN institutionalised a world of nation-states.

Two World Wars and nationalism

The rise of aggressive ethnic nationalism in Germany, Italy, and Japan was central to the causes of both World Wars. Nazi racial ideology — combining ethnic nationalism with pseudo-scientific racism and imperial ambition — drove the Holocaust and WWII in Europe. The experience produced strong post-war institutional responses: human rights law, European integration, decolonisation, and a general suspicion of aggressive nationalism in the West.

Anti-colonial nationalism

After WWII, nationalist movements in Asia, Africa, and elsewhere successfully ended European colonial rule. Gandhi in India, Nkrumah in Ghana, Ho Chi Minh in Vietnam, Nyerere in Tanzania, and many others led movements that combined anti-colonial politics with nation-building. These movements were predominantly civic in aspiration — seeking political sovereignty — though they also drew on cultural and ethnic mobilisation. Their success created the modern global state system.

Ethnic cleansing and genocide

The 20th century saw repeated episodes of nationalism producing mass violence against ethnic minorities. The Armenian genocide (1915) under Ottoman rule; the Holocaust (1933-45); the partition of India and Pakistan (1947), with over a million killed; the former Yugoslavia (1991-99), especially Bosnia; Rwanda (1994); and many smaller cases. The pattern is recognisable: ethnic nationalist movements define some group as not truly part of the nation, use propaganda to dehumanise them, and then justify or carry out their removal. The 21st-century revival: nationalist politics has revived in many countries since about 2000. Hindu nationalism (BJP/RSS in India, increasingly dominant since 2014). Russian nationalism under Putin, including territorial aggression against Ukraine. Turkish nationalism under Erdoğan. Israeli ultra-nationalism in recent coalitions. Nationalist parties in Hungary (Orbán), Poland (PiS until 2023), Italy, France, the Netherlands, the US (Trump's 'America First'), Brazil (Bolsonaro), the Philippines (Duterte), and elsewhere. The drivers are much debated: economic insecurity, migration, cultural change, identity politics, media environments. The 'populist' dimension — anti-elite, claiming to speak for 'the real people' — often combines with nationalism.

Cosmopolitanism

The main theoretical alternative to nationalism is cosmopolitanism — the view that all humans form a single moral community and that loyalty to specific nations should be balanced by or subordinate to broader human obligations. Kantian, utilitarian, and human rights frameworks all contain cosmopolitan elements. Cosmopolitanism is often associated with international institutions, global civil society, and universal human rights. Critics argue it is unrealistic, elitist, or incompatible with meaningful democracy, which requires bounded political communities. The debate between nationalism and cosmopolitanism remains one of the central unsettled questions of political philosophy.

Teaching note

This is a politically sensitive topic where students may hold strong views. Be careful to present nationalism's genuine achievements (independence, democratic community) alongside its dangers (aggression, violence against minorities). The goal is to help students think carefully, not to endorse any particular view.

Key Vocabulary
Nationalism
The political doctrine that nations are the primary units of political legitimacy, that nations should govern themselves, and that loyalty to the nation should be a central political commitment.
Nation-state
A state whose territory corresponds closely with a nation — the dominant form of political organisation in the modern world, though rarely achieved in pure form.
Civic nationalism
A form of nationalism that defines national identity through shared political values, institutions, and citizenship — open in principle to newcomers who accept these.
Ethnic nationalism
A form of nationalism that defines national identity through shared blood, ancestry, language, or religion — typically closed to outsiders regardless of length of residence.
Self-determination
The principle that peoples have the right to determine their own political status — a key principle in international law since the Wilson era.
Imagined community
Benedict Anderson's term for the nation: a community imagined by its members, who never know most of them but share the image of their common belonging.
Cosmopolitanism
The view that all humans form a single moral community and that loyalty to specific nations should be balanced by broader human obligations. The main theoretical alternative to strong nationalism.
Ethnic cleansing
The forced removal of an ethnic group from a territory — through violence, intimidation, or massacre. A recurring product of extreme ethnic nationalism.
Irredentism
A nationalist claim for territory held by another state on grounds of shared ethnic or historical connection. Often a source of international conflict.
Constitutional patriotism
A concept (developed by Jürgen Habermas) of attachment to the constitutional values of a political community rather than to ethnic or cultural identity. An attempt to ground civic identity without ethnic nationalism.
Classroom Activities
Activity 1 — The civic/ethnic distinction tested
PurposeStudents apply the civic/ethnic distinction to real cases and evaluate its usefulness.
How to run itPresent the distinction clearly. Civic nationalism defines the nation through political values and citizenship; ethnic nationalism through blood, ancestry, or culture. Then present test cases that complicate the distinction. (1) The US: has strong civic language ('all men are created equal') but spent much of its history excluding non-white people from full membership. Which is it, civically or ethnically? (2) Germany: was a model of ethnic nationalism (blood-based citizenship until 2000), but has since moved toward more civic approaches. Has it fully changed? (3) Israel: established as the Jewish national home, which is a religious/ethnic definition, but operates democratically with a substantial non-Jewish minority. Where does it fit? (4) India: founded on civic secular principles (the 1950 constitution), but current Hindu nationalist politics pushes toward an ethnic/religious definition. What does this transition tell us? (5) France: civic-republican in principle, but has had ongoing tensions over whether French Muslims can be 'truly' French. How does lived reality compare to doctrine? Ask: how useful is the civic/ethnic distinction? Is any real country purely one or the other? What can we learn by using the distinction carefully even when it does not cleanly apply?
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents cases verbally. Students discuss in groups. No materials needed.
Activity 2 — Why does nationalism produce violence?
PurposeStudents engage with the relationship between nationalist politics and mass violence against minorities.
How to run itPresent the pattern that scholars have identified in multiple cases. Nationalism can produce violence when several factors come together: (1) An ideology defines the nation in exclusive terms — some group is not 'really' part of it. (2) That group is blamed for problems — economic decline, cultural change, past defeats, current threats. (3) Propaganda dehumanises the group — calls them criminals, parasites, traitors, or less than human. (4) Political entrepreneurs exploit these narratives for power. (5) Legal or institutional changes remove protections for the group. (6) Violence begins at small scales and escalates. (7) State action either participates in or fails to prevent the violence. Walk through specific cases. Nazi Germany: Jews as an internal enemy; anti-Semitic propaganda; Nuremberg Laws; Kristallnacht; Holocaust. Rwanda 1994: Hutu extremist ideology defining Tutsi as cockroaches; radio propaganda; systematic planning; genocide. Former Yugoslavia 1990s: nationalist leaders (Milošević, Tuđman, others) whipping up ethnic fears; international community slow to respond; mass violence in Bosnia. Myanmar 2017: Buddhist nationalist movement defining Rohingya as illegal Bengalis; restriction of rights; military attacks; mass expulsion. Ask: what patterns are common across all cases? What interventions — political, social, legal — might have prevented each? Can warning signs be recognised? Discuss the importance of protecting minorities, independent media, and institutional checks before the violence starts.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents pattern and cases verbally. Students discuss in groups. No materials needed.
Activity 3 — The 21st-century nationalist revival
PurposeStudents examine the current resurgence of nationalism and evaluate its causes.
How to run itPresent the phenomenon. Over the past 20-25 years, nationalist politics has grown in power across much of the world. Present specific cases without judgement: India (BJP, Modi since 2014); Russia (Putin, emphasising Russian identity); Turkey (Erdoğan); Hungary (Orbán); Poland (PiS 2015-2023); Italy (Meloni, Salvini); France (Le Pen, far right growth); Germany (AfD); Netherlands (Wilders); UK (Brexit vote, elements of Tory/Reform politics); US (Trump movement); Brazil (Bolsonaro); Philippines (Duterte). These movements differ enormously — some are ethnic nationalist, some religious nationalist, some civic-populist, some anti-immigrant above all. Present competing explanations. (1) Economic insecurity: decline of manufacturing, stagnating wages, perceived unfairness of globalisation. (2) Cultural anxiety: rapid change in values, gender roles, immigration. (3) Elite failure: perceived corruption, detachment, and contempt of ruling elites. (4) Information environment: social media, disinformation, filter bubbles. (5) Identity: the desire for belonging in a world that feels dislocating. (6) Political opportunity: leaders willing to exploit grievances that mainstream parties had avoided. Ask: which explanation is most persuasive? Can the factors be separated, or do they combine? Is the revival reversible? What alternative politics could meet the genuine concerns of nationalist voters without the exclusionary features? Note: be careful to distinguish analysis from endorsement. Explaining why people feel something is not the same as agreeing with the conclusions they reach.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents phenomenon and explanations verbally. Students discuss in groups. No materials needed.
Discussion Questions
  • Q1Benedict Anderson called nations 'imagined communities'. Does this diminish the significance of national identity, or does it simply describe how all large identities are constructed?
  • Q2Civic nationalism is often presented as the 'good' form and ethnic nationalism as the 'bad' form. Is this too simple? Are there legitimate forms of cultural or historical attachment that do not fit purely civic models?
  • Q3Anti-colonial nationalism produced many of today's nation-states, often through violence against colonial powers. Was this form of nationalism justified? What does it tell us about the ethics of nationalist movements?
  • Q4Cosmopolitan theorists argue that strong national loyalties are incompatible with global obligations (to refugees, to future generations, to people in poorer countries). Is this true? How should the competing claims be balanced?
  • Q5Nationalism has had a strong revival in many democracies over the past 25 years. Is this a passing phenomenon or a lasting feature of our era? What does it depend on?
  • Q6Some argue that healthy democracies require shared national identity — that citizens must see themselves as members of a common project to accept redistribution, follow common rules, and work together. Is this right? If so, what does it imply for multicultural societies?
  • Q7George Orwell distinguished sharply between patriotism (personal attachment) and nationalism (political aggression). Is the distinction defensible? Where does it break down?
Writing Tasks
Task 1 — Extended essay
'Nationalism is always dangerous — the harms it has done far outweigh any good.' To what extent do you agree? Write 400 to 600 words.
Skills: Thesis-driven argument, balanced historical assessment, engaging with forms of nationalism
Task 2 — Analytical response
Explain the distinction between civic and ethnic nationalism, give an example of each, and discuss whether the distinction is analytically clean or only approximate. Write 200 to 300 words.
Skills: Explaining a conceptual distinction, applying it to examples, evaluating its limits
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Nations are natural, ancient, and eternal units of human organisation.

What to teach instead

Modern scholarship (Anderson, Gellner, Hobsbawm, and others) has shown that the idea of the nation-state as the standard political unit is relatively recent — mostly a product of the 19th and 20th centuries. Before then, most of the world was organised into empires, kingdoms, and principalities with mixed populations and no assumption that rulers and ruled should share ethnic identity. Many 'ancient' national identities turn out to be more recent constructions. This does not make them less real in their effects, but treating them as natural or eternal is historically inaccurate.

Common misconception

Civic nationalism is always good; ethnic nationalism is always bad.

What to teach instead

The civic/ethnic distinction is analytically useful but too simple if treated as a clean moral binary. Every real nation combines both elements. Civic nationalism has coexisted with exclusion in practice (French colonial Algeria, American racial history). Some cultural/ethnic attachments are legitimate and do not produce exclusion or violence. What matters is whether national identity is open or closed, inclusive or exclusive, democratic or authoritarian — not only whether the rhetoric is civic or ethnic. The test is the treatment of minorities, migrants, and dissenters, not the language of official doctrine.

Common misconception

Strong national identity is incompatible with universal human rights.

What to teach instead

The relationship between nationalism and human rights is genuinely complex, but the claim that they are simply incompatible is too strong. The modern human rights framework was largely built by nation-states and depends on them for enforcement. National belonging can support solidarity that makes rights protection possible — the welfare states of the Nordic countries, for instance. Tensions arise with specific forms of nationalism that treat outsiders or minorities as threats. The task is not to eliminate national identity but to develop forms of it compatible with broader obligations.

Common misconception

The 21st-century nationalist revival is simply a return of old-fashioned prejudice.

What to teach instead

The current nationalist revival is driven by real phenomena that cannot be dismissed as mere prejudice: economic decline in particular regions, rapid cultural change, large-scale migration, declining trust in elites, financial crises. The grievances many nationalist voters express often have substantive basis. This does not justify the responses nationalist movements offer — blaming minorities, closing societies, authoritarian leadership — but it means that countering these movements requires addressing the underlying causes, not just criticising the responses. Progressive forces that dismiss nationalist voters as simply prejudiced typically fail to win them back.

Further Information

Key texts accessible to students: Benedict Anderson, 'Imagined Communities' (1983) — the foundational modern work, accessible and influential. Ernest Gellner, 'Nations and Nationalism' (1983) — the key theoretical alternative to Anderson. Eric Hobsbawm, 'Nations and Nationalism since 1780' (1990) — the standard historical overview. For classical statements: Johann Gottfried Herder's writings on cultural nationalism; Giuseppe Mazzini on liberal nationalism; Ernest Renan, 'What Is a Nation?' (1882) — short and accessible. For critical perspectives: Frantz Fanon, 'The Wretched of the Earth' (1961) on anti-colonial nationalism; Timothy Snyder's 'Bloodlands' (2010) on the violence nationalism has produced. For current debates: Jan-Werner Müller, 'What Is Populism?' (2016); Yascha Mounk, 'The People vs. Democracy' (2018); Ivan Krastev, 'After Europe' (2017). George Orwell's essay 'Notes on Nationalism' (1945) remains a sharp starting point. Data sources: V-Dem Institute's annual democracy reports (v-dem.net); Freedom House annual reports (freedomhouse.org) track nationalist movements and their effects.