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https://studentshare.org/geography/1658032-stateless-nation.
Topic: LESS NATION A less nation refers to nations, religions or a group of individuals who taken as the minority in any region or a nation and have no place or nation they can regard as their own. Examples of such stateless nation are Scotland, Hawaii, Taiwan, Tibet, and Chiapas. The group or religion in the discussion is mainly faced with many challenges (Julius, p. 2). The main challenge is that the majority religions or communities in a given geographical region always neglect them. Due to this, they are disadvantaged, as they have no access to sufficient resources and other facilities that major group’s access (Mooney, Gerry, and Scott, p. 28). For this study, we will look into Taiwan.
“The state should culturally be aware of itself as a discrete body and with a discrete civic structure” (Storm, Carsten, and Harrison, p. 8). For centuries, the people of Taiwan have lived with no freedom that is they live by the ordeal of a colonial people (Richard, p. 17). They were not given the opportunity to govern themselves. Taiwan population consisted of refugees, pirates, colonizers and colonizers who migrated to the island from different origins. Due to this, every individual or group that moved into the area have they are own believes, goals and visions.
Therefore, the people who lived there had no identity that prevented them from fighting for their rights (Yasutomo, p.34). Taiwan contains many influences that are non-china. The republican government controls them. Taiwan is referred to as a ‘rebelling province’ by the government of rival People’s Republic of china. They are considered to be rebelling against the rightful government of united china. Due to the non-china influences received from the region, Taiwanese can refer as a rebelling province (Minahan, p. 1831).Works citedFriend, Julius W.
Stateless Nations: Western European Regional Nationalisms and the Old Nations. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012. Print.Kagan, Richard C. Taiwans Statesman: Lee Teng-Hui and Democracy in Asia. Annapolis, Md: Naval Institute Press, 2007. Print.Minahan, James. Encyclopedia of the Stateless National: Ethnic and National Groups Around the World. Westport, Conn. [u.a.: Greenwood Press, 2002. Print.Mooney, Gerry, and Gill Scott. Social Justice and Social Policy in Scotland.
Bristol: Policy, 2012. Print.Morigiwa, Yasutomo. Universal Minority Rights?: A Transnational Approach; Proceedings of the Fifth Kobe Lectures Tokyo and Kyoto, December 1998. Stuttgart: Steiner, 2004. Print.Storm, Carsten, and Mark Harrison. The Margins of Becoming: Identity and Culture in Taiwan. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2007. Print.
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