In: American Ethnologist, 2014, vol. 41, no. 2, p. 384-385
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In: Nations and Nationalism, 2009, vol. 15, no. 4, p. 696-715
This article argues for dissolving the civic–ethnic dichotomy into several analytical dimensions and suggests ‘autochthony’ and 'activism’ as two such alternatives. It does so by first presenting a case study of Irish language revivalism and identity discourses in the North of Ireland, in which locals turn out to be both ‘civic’ nationalists and ‘ethno’-cultural revivalists. The...
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In: Social Science & Medicine, 2010, vol. 71, no. 2, p. 236-243
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In: Critique of Anthropology, 2011, vol. 31, no. 1, p. 63-81
Recently, proliferating discourses on autochthony and indigeneity have been noted as the flip-side of globalization. Against this backdrop, this article synthesizes insights from studies of nationalism and research on autochthony, explaining how identity formations literally ‘take place’ by conceptualizing ‘autochthony’ – the proclaimed ‘original’ link between individual, territory...
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In: Development and Change, 2014, vol. 45, no. 3, p. 395-414
Since the end of the Cold War, political new beginnings have increasingly been linked to questions of transitional justice. The contributions to this collection examine a series of cases from across the African continent where peaceful ‘new beginnings’ have been declared after periods of violence and where transitional justice institutions played a role in defining justice and the new...
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In: Journal of Linguistic Anthropology, 2014, vol. 24, no. 1, p. 63-83
A considerable number of Irish Catholics in West Belfast, originally native English speakers, have started learning the Irish language throughout the Northern Irish conflict in order to feel more Irish. Many of these have developed a strong conviction that the Irish language contains a different worldview from the one embodied in English. However, rather than constituting a plausible...
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In: Development and Change, 2014, vol. 45, no. 3, p. 502-523
Based on a case study of the so-called ‘Kafferskraal’ land claim, this article scrutinizes the ongoing land restitution process in post-apartheid South Africa with regard to its capacity to provide a transition towards ‘justice’. After sketching the legal and institutional set-up of land restitution, the justice of the actual restitution process is explored with reference to conflicting...
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In: Journal of Southern African Studies, 2015, vol. 41, no. 5, p. 937-952
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In: The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology, 2015, vol. 33, no. 1, p. 81-96
This article takes as its starting point a peculiar land claim within the ongoing South African land restitution process – more specifically, the legal and administrative technicalities that allowed for the implosion of the accompanying court case in the Land Claims Court – to open up a space for reflection on the ambiguous nature of state bureaucracies as ambiguity-reducing machines. Tracing...
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In: Journal of Southern African Studies, 2015, vol. 41, no. 5, p. 1019-1034
South African land restitution, through which the post-apartheid state compensates victims of racial land dispossession, has been intimately linked to former homelands: prototypical rural claims are those of communities that lost their rights in land when being forcibly relocated to reserves, and they now aspire to return to their former homes and lands from their despised ‘homelands’....
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