Divided Europeans: Understanding Ethnicities in Conflict

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Tim Allen, John Eade
Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, Jun 30, 1999 - History - 349 pages
This book critiques the concepts of cultural functionalism and biologised ethnicity. The chapters examine ethnicities in conflict across Europe, and have been selected on the grounds that they not only provide a rich ethnographic account of overt ethnic conflict or racial violence, but also relate these local situations to wider processes. The contributors do not put forward a single homogeneous point of view, but they all assume perspectives that are opposed to the prevalent simplistic primordialism of most media coverage and political analysis. Most of the contributors are anthropologists and have presented drafts of their chapters at a series of meetings organised by a network called the Forum Against Violence. Many of the articles have appeared previously in the "International Journal on" "Minority and Group Rights (Volume 4)," This book should be of interest to academics and practitioners in the fields of human rights, anthropology and related topics.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
Ethnicity Xenophobia and the Boundaries of Europe
41
Typology of Aggressiveness and National Violence in
59
Ethnic Conflict
77
A Mixed Borderline Village under UN Supervision
105
The Case
127
Ethnic Conflict within a Fractured Belgian BiNational
145
Patterns of Ethnic Violence in a Frankfurt Streetgang
159
Parading a Loyal Protestant Identity
173
Interpreting Teenage InterEthnic Violence
201
The British Media
225
Signs of the Times? Violence Graffiti and Racism in
243
Interpreting Racist Violence in France
285
A Deadly Linguistics? Tales from the Celtic Fringe
303
Index
335
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