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Why is It Difficult to Define the Nation? How Are Nation and State Related in Modern Society? - Sociology

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प्रश्न

Why is it difficult to define the nation? How are nation and state related in modern society?

थोडक्यात उत्तर

उत्तर

  • A nation is a peculiar sort of community that is easy to describe but hard to define.
  • We can describe many nations founded on the basis of common cultural, historical institutions like a shared religion, language, ethnicity, history or regional culture.
  • But it is hard to come up with any defining features for the nation.
  • For every possible criterion there are exceptions and counterexamples.
  • For example :- There are many nations that do not share a common language, religion, ethnicity and so on. On the other hand, there are many languages, religions or ethnicities that are shared across nations. But this does not lead to the transformation of a single unified nation.

Nation at the simplest level, is a community of communities. Members of a nation share the desire to be a part of the same political collectivity. Nations are communities that have a state of their own.

  • In modern times, there has been a one-to-one bond between nation and state. But this development is new.
  • It wasn’t true of the past that a single state could represent a single nation or every nation must have its own state.
  • For example, Soviet Union explicitly recognized that the people it governed were of different nations.
  • Also, people constituting a nation may actually be citizens or residents of different states. There are more Jamaicans living outside Jamaica than in Jamaica.
  • Dual citizenship could, also, be a possibility. These laws allow citizens of a particular state to also simultaneously be citizens of another state. Example, Jewish Americans May be citizens of Israel as well as the USA.
  • Thus, nation is a community that has been able to acquire a state of its own. It‘s also seen that states are finding it more and more necessary to claim that they represent a nation.
  • A feature of the modem era is the establishment of democracy and nationalism as dominant sources of political legitimacy. This implies that nation is the most accepted or proper justification for a state, while people are the ultimate source of legitimacy of the nation.
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The Nation-state and Religion-related Issues and Identities
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पाठ 6: The Challenges of Cultural Diversity - Exercise [पृष्ठ १३९]

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एनसीईआरटी Sociology - Indian Society [English] Class 12
पाठ 6 The Challenges of Cultural Diversity
Exercise | Q 3 | पृष्ठ १३९

संबंधित प्रश्‍न

What is a ‘minority’? Why do minorities need protection from the state?


What is communalism?


A state is "a body that successfully claims a monopoly of legitimate force in a particular territory", according to ____________.


Parsis or Sikhs are examples of anomalous minority groups because of which of the following reasons?


Another set of complications is created by the tension between the Indian state’s simultaneous commitment to secularism as well as the protection of minorities. The protection of minorities requires that they be given special consideration in a context where the normal working of the political system places them at a disadvantage vis-à-vis the majority community. But providing such protection immediately invites the accusation of favouritism or ‘appeasement’ of minorities. Opponents argue that secularism of this sort is only an excuse to favour the minorities in return for their votes or other kinds of support. Supporters argue that without such special protection, secularism can turn into an excuse for imposing the majority community’s values and norms on the minorities.

As per the given passage, which of the following is true for India?


Another set of complications is created by the tension between the Indian state’s simultaneous commitment to secularism as well as the protection of minorities. The protection of minorities requires that they be given special consideration in a context where the normal working of the political system places them at a disadvantage vis-à-vis the majority community. But providing such protection immediately invites the accusation of favouritism or ‘appeasement’ of minorities. Opponents argue that secularism of this sort is only an excuse to favour the minorities in return for their votes or other kinds of support. Supporters argue that without such special protection, secularism can turn into an excuse for imposing the majority community’s values and norms on the minorities.

The complication mentioned in the passage is not due to:


Another set of complications is created by the tension between the Indian state’s simultaneous commitment to secularism as well as the protection of minorities. The protection of minorities requires that they be given special consideration in a context where the normal working of the political system places them at a disadvantage vis-à-vis the majority community. But providing such protection immediately invites the accusation of favouritism or ‘appeasement’ of minorities. Opponents argue that secularism of this sort is only an excuse to favour the minorities in return for their votes or other kinds of support. Supporters argue that without such special protection, secularism can turn into an excuse for imposing the majority community’s values and norms on the minorities.

Which of the following does not convey the meaning of secularisation?


The positive impact of successes – such as the achievement of statehood for Jharkhand and Chattisgarh after a long struggle – is moderated by continuing problems. Many of the states of the North-East, for example, have been living for decades under special laws that limit the civil liberties of citizens. Thus, citizens of states like Manipur or Nagaland don’t have the same rights as other citizens of India because their states have been declared as disturbed areas’.

States like Jharkhand and Chattisgarh are examples of a federal structure of India. Mark the statement as true or false.


How many languages are recognised officially in 8th Schedule of Constitution?


The ______ process involves a  continuous dialogue, negotiation and even struggle against significant others like our parents, family, kin group and our community. Our community provides us the language and the cultural values through which we comprehend the world. It also anchors our self-identity.


In ______ authority, rules are obeyed because their commands are within the impersonal, formally defined scope of their office?


______ is the political process that has to do with the authoritative formulation of policies that are binding and pervasive throughout society.


Which state often limit or abolish civil liberties like freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of political activity, right to protection from wrongful use of authority, right to the due processes of the law?


The Right to Information Act was passed by Parliament on


Which of the following term refers to aggressive chauvinism based on religious identify?


The Right to Information Act specifics that citizens have a right to


Nation building is viewed mainly as a ______ process of economic development and social transformation. 


The author of the book "The Wealth of Nations is written" by


A state is "a body that successfully claims a monopoly of legitimate force in a particular territory", according to


The Right to Information Act (RTI) specifies that citizens have a right to


With an example show how being a minority group can be disadvantageous in one sense but not in another.


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