Type | Thesis or Dissertation - Master of Social Sciences |
Title | Nationalism and state integration strategy-A case study of Uygur people in Xinjiang, China |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2005 |
URL | http://scholarbank.nus.sg/bitstream/handle/10635/17113/whole thesis.pdf?sequence=1 |
Abstract | The PRC is a multi-ethnic country comprising the Han majority group and 55 other ethnic minorities. Since many of the minorities are populated in strategically important peripheral areas, how to integrate these ethnic groups and frontier regions into China Proper has been a critical issue in China’s state-building process. Despite the serious efforts made by the CCP in its state-building project, the 1990s has seen a growing ethno-nationalism countrywide. One of the most extreme cases is the Uyghur’s East Turkestan movement, which, after remaining silent in the whole decade of the 1970s, resurfaced from 1980, and became active since the 1990s. What accounts for this surge of ethno-nationalism, especially Uyghur activism? Viewing the state as a part of society, this paper attempts to explore the dynamics between state-building and ethno-nationalism in China. It argues that statebuilding, which intends to assure and expand its power, provides opportunity for ethno-nationalism to grow, and even more, for ethnic political movements to occur. By tracing the processes and dynamics as to how the shift in the state policy affects the cognitive framework of the minority people, provides sustainable resource to the movement, and offers space for social movement organizations to surface, this paper will then illustrate how state-building produces some unintended results. |
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