Publication | Closed Access
Divided loyalties and fractured sovereignty: Transnationalism and the nation-state in Aotearoa/New Zealand
48
Citations
20
References
2003
Year
NationalismColonialismDecolonialitySocial SciencesPolynesian StudiesFractured SovereigntySettler ColonialismTransnational LinkagesLanguage StudiesGeopoliticsTransnational NetworkTransnational HistoryAotearoa/new ZealandInternational RelationsEthnic IdentityPostcolonial StudiesWorld PoliticsGlobalizationDiaspora StudyCultureInternationalism (Politics)Diaspora StudiesPolitical PluralismNew ZealandAnthropologyColonial StudiesPolitical ScienceAnti-imperialismDiasporic Movement
New Zealand represents one example of the way in which a colonially-inspired transnationalism linking the country with the UK has been supplemented by new and intensified forms of transnationalism encompassing the Pacific and Asia. Our focus in this paper is on the nature of an emergent Pacific diaspora involving primarily Polynesian communities and the challenges that this transnationalism presents to the state and national identity. The transnationalism of Pacific peoples is reflected in the circulation of people, capital and ideas, the latter increasingly via the Internet, but the nature of transnational linkages is also significantly influenced by changes to ethnic identity and practice, and by the impoverishment of both 'homeland' and diasporic communities. Keywords: New ZealandMaoriPacific PeoplesTransnationalismNation-stateCirculation
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1