Index

Yaqoub BouAynaya (Institute of Art, Design and Technology (IADT), Ireland)

Redefining Irishness in a Globalized World: National Identity and European Integration

ISBN: 978-1-83797-942-4, eISBN: 978-1-83797-941-7

Publication date: 19 September 2024

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

BouAynaya, Y. (2024), "Index", Redefining Irishness in a Globalized World: National Identity and European Integration, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 255-261. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83797-941-720241013

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Yaqoub BouAynaya


INDEX

A posteriori
, 228, 230

A priori
, 70, 228, 230

Acculturation
, 4

Affinity towards Irish way of being, feelings of
, 136–140

Altruism
, 233

27th Amendment of the Constitution Act (2004)
, 52

Ancestral lineage
, 112

Anthropocentric
, 204

Anthropocentrism
, 181

Assertions
, 142

Assimilation
, 60, 232–233

Assimilationist
, 37

Authority in conversation
, 190–196

Autonomous self-constitution
, 62–64

Autonomous self-constitutionality
, 229

Banal Nationalism
, 32

Banal nationalism
, 35

Begrudgery
, 93, 105–107, 113

Belfast focus group discussion
, 107, 116, 183, 185–186, 201

Belonging, sense of
, 112

Biopolitics
, 34–35

Biopower
, 34, 49

Body politic
, 23

Borders
, 31

Bureaucracy
, 33

Capitalism
, 26, 186

Categorization, ethical imperative of
, 5–10

Celtic historical epoch
, 220

Celtic revivalism
, 38

Citizenship

acquisition
, 54

criteria
, 52

Civic nationalism
, 165

Civic patriotism
, 46, 163

Civic-republican
, 60

Civic-state
, 49

Civil disobedience
, 63

Clan
, 105–107

genealogical lineage and
, 103–105

Classificatory distinction
, 129, 131

Clondalkin focus group discussion
, 96, 134, 144, 149, 173, 178, 194

Colonial rule
, 232

Colonial subordination/‘otherness’, relic of
, 56–61

Colonialism
, 12, 58, 61

Colonization of self
, 61–62, 64

Community
, 27, 47, 110, 113, 214

unifies or community of distinction
, 107–114

Community of value
, 20, 173

Consanguineous relation
, 104

Conservatism
, 169, 182–184, 204, 210, 215, 224–225

Conservative positions
, 183

Constitutional vote
, 53

Constructivist approach
, 71

Constructivist grounded theory
, 71

approach
, 71

framework
, 73

iterative approach to
, 70–71

Consumerism
, 205

Contemporary identities
, 18

Contemporary Irishness
, 37

Contemporary theory
, 19

Continental nativism
, 235

Conversation analysis
, 72

Coolock focus group discussion
, 105, 123, 130, 151, 163, 175, 180

Cosmopolitan justice
, 184

Cosmopolitan law
, 46

Cosmopolitan nationalist
, 48

Cosmopolitan patriotism
, 47, 219–220

Cosmopolitanism
, 7, 20, 47, 49, 216

as panacea
, 44–50

Cosmopolitans
, 45–46

Cultural appropriation, migration and management of
, 196–199

Cultural assimilation
, 4

Cultural awareness, learning history to gain
, 125–128

Cultural capital
, 178

Cultural exposure
, 219

Cultural hegemony
, 74

Cultural hybridity
, 37

Cultural hybridization
, 219–220

Cultural relativism
, 47, 61

Cultural transmission
, 94–98

Culture
, 213

Data analysis techniques
, 76

Data collection tools
, 82

De-institutionalization
, 111

Democratic process
, 163

Denationalization
, 204

Deracination
, 8

Design innovation
, 75–77

Developmentalism
, 38

Dilemmas of post-national nation state
, 42–44

Direct Provision system
, 209

Discourse analysis
, 69, 72

Discursive practices
, 131, 137–138

seeking knowledge of
, 64–65

Distinction, community of
, 107–114

Dominant group
, 71–73

Dominant universality
, 28

Drogheda focus group discussion
, 159, 173

Drumcondra focus group discussion
, 106, 108, 118, 130–131, 145, 156, 193, 196, 201

Dublin City Council
, 88

Economization
, 204

Egalitarianism
, 11, 46, 67

Egocentrism
, 223

Empathy
, 233

Empire
, 58

English, language of
, 231–232

Englishness
, 37

Essential Irishness
, 38–42

Essentialism
, 14, 17, 43

within social constructivism
, 20–24

Ethical imperative of knowledge, categorization and classification
, 5–10

Ethnic absolutism
, 9

Ethnic distinction, reification fallacy of
, 147–152

Ethnic nationalisms
, 162

Ethnicity
, 133

Ethno-national identifications
, 30

Ethno-nationalist protectionist approach
, 41

Ethno-racial heterogenization
, 222

Ethno-racialized identity ascription, 152–154

Ethnocentric character
, 217

Ethnocentrisms
, 222

Eurocentric neoliberalism
, 60

European dominance
, 227

European governance
, 200–201

European Migration Network
, 53

European Union (EU)
, 57, 59, 125, 170, 186, 189

Exclusion
, 19, 131

Existential reality
, 31

Façade democracy
, 60, 201

Family
, 94–98, 102

lineage
, 120

Fatalism
, 4

Feudalism
, 105–107, 120

Financial capitalism
, 170

Flawed democracy
, 42

Flexible citizenship
, 43

Floating signifier
, 8

Fluid modernity concept
, 19

Focus group discussions
, 138, 154, 182

additional post-viewing questions, 91

and analysis
, 78–86

key emergent themes from main stage discussions
, 83–85

pre-and post-viewing questions
, 90

Free provisions
, 223

French nationality
, 179

Friendliness
, 102

Genealogical assumptions and notions of ‘race’
, 142–143

Genealogical lineage
, 212

and clan
, 103–105

Genealogical links
, 117

Genealogy
, 118, 120

Generalized reciprocity
, 180, 203, 224

Global financial capitalism
, 227

Globalism
, 7

Globalization
, 5, 41, 43, 59, 141, 155, 165, 188, 199–207, 222

Glocalization
, 39, 41, 203

Governance
, 199–207

Governmentality
, 9, 11, 16, 23, 27, 33, 35, 42, 62–63

of self
, 61–62

Grounded theory model
, 71, 87

Grudges
, 105–107

Habitus
, 4

Heterogeneity
, 17

Historical amnesia
, 217

Historical irishness and Irish

contradictions within ‘nativist’ claims to irishness
, 121–123

historical orientations of irishness
, 116–118

learning history to gain cultural awareness
, 125–128

post-colonial yet Juvenile nation state
, 123–125

referencing history in relation to societal change
, 118–121

Historicity
, 127

History
, 218

Hobbesian theory (on human nature), 238

Home
, 93, 96

wider family as lineage to irishness and notions of
, 98–103

Homogeneity
, 17, 36

of Irish physiological traits
, 164

Homogeneous nation
, 28, 36

Homogenization
, 126

Hybrid identities
, 18

Hybridity
, 23, 153

Identification
, 19

Identity
, 30–35

formation
, 72

problematizing
, 17–20

social construction of identities and knowledge-based society
, 2–5

Ideological naturalization
, 55

IMF
, 125

Immortality
, 236

Imperialism
, 61

Incorporation
, 37

Individual interviewees
, 78

Individualism
, 229

Insider
, 129

Insiderism
, 9

Institutional policy
, 51

Institutional racism
, 59

Institutional structural flaws
, 223

Institutionalization
, 61

Integration
, 60, 232

Interculturalism
, 47, 62, 205, 220, 232

Internationalism
, 7

Intolerant autonomous liberalism
, 62

Intra-European migration
, 204

Intrinsicism
, 216

Ireland
, 27

Irish, language of
, 231–232

Irish, recognising

feelings of affinity towards Irish way of being
, 136–140

Jus Soli, Jus Sanguinis or temporal exposure to Irish culture
, 134–136

perceiving oneself as Irish
, 132–134

segregation of ‘Irish’ and being Irish Citizen
, 130–132

Irish citizen
, 129, 131, 138

segregation of ‘Irish’ and being
, 130–132

Irish Citizenship of Children of Non-national Parents
, 52

Irish Citizenship Referendum (2004)
, 11, 51–55, 61–62, 134, 170

Irish clan
, 104

Irish community
, 110, 113, 214

Irish conservatism
, 184

Irish Constitution
, 53

Irish context
, 23

Irish cultural norms
, 219

Irish culture
, 136

Irish descent
, 178

Irish governance
, 200

Irish Granny rule
, 56

Irish historicity
, 127

Irish history
, 115, 120, 127

Irish maternity system
, 55

Irish physiological traits
, 164

Irish social fabric
, 222

Irish society
, 25, 75, 209

Irish stereotype
, 152

Irish through conformity and participation
, 143–145

Irish welfare state

authority and perceived rational pragmatism in conversation
, 190–196

conservatism and irishness
, 182–184

governance, regionalism and globalization
, 199–207

migration and management of cultural appropriation
, 196–199

model
, 176

Nation state perpetuating migration controls and nationalism
, 185–189

‘Irish’ identity
, 2, 10–13, 21, 40, 89, 93, 160, 196, 239

‘Irish’ national Identity, historical construction of
, 35–38

Irishness
, 15, 17, 19, 24–29, 35, 49–50, 61, 64, 72, 88–89, 102, 112, 113, 115, 120, 145–146, 149–150, 162, 165, 169, 182–184, 204, 209–210, 214, 224, 234, 237

contradictions within ‘nativist’ claims to
, 121–123

criteria of
, 36

ethical imperative of knowledge, categorization and classification
, 5–10

historical orientations of
, 116–118

Irish’ identity
, 10–13

misconceptions of
, 10

mythological representations of
, 55–56

overview
, 13–16

as perceived in era of liquid modernity
, 210–227

racialization of
, 36

re/imagining
, 160–167

regionalization
, 1–2

social construction of identities and knowledge-based society
, 2–5

wider family as lineage to
, 98–103

Iterative analytic process
, 71

Iterative approach to constructivist grounded theory
, 70–71

Jus sanguinis
, 12

association
, 139

citizenship
, 56

criteria
, 54

jus sanguinis/jus soli-based citizenship legislation
, 55

legislation
, 52–55

or temporal exposure to Irish culture
, 134–136

Jus soli

criteria
, 54

or temporal exposure to Irish culture
, 134–136

Juvenile Nation State
, 123–125

Kinship paternalism
, 105

Knowledge, ethical imperative of
, 5–10

Knowledge construction
, 6

Knowledge society
, 3, 5–6, 61

Knowledge-based society, social construction of
, 2–5

Language
, 69, 72

of Irish and English
, 231–232

Legal-technical mechanisms
, 61

Leixlip focus group discussion
, 154

Liberal democracy
, 43, 60

Liberal individualism
, 63

Liberal multiculturalism
, 42, 51, 62

Liberal nationalist
, 48

Liberalism
, 62

Limerick focus group discussion
, 111, 123, 188, 190, 200

Linguistic capital
, 101

Linguistic production relations
, 69

Liquid modernity
, 2, 11, 40, 119, 209, 219, 228, 237

irishness as perceived in era of
, 210–227

Localism
, 7

Lockean humanist perspective
, 59

Manifest authority
, 6

Manipulative elites
, 21

Marginalization
, 23

Methodological approach
, 12, 14, 67, 71

Methodological justification
, 71–73

Methodological nationalism
, 181

Methodological theory
, 70

Migration

and management of cultural appropriation
, 196–199

migration-related diversity
, 18

Minoritization
, 110

Modern ‘Irish’ identity
, 37

Modernity
, 10, 29, 40

Monarchical system
, 52

Moral conservatism
, 184

Morality of patriotism
, 46

Multiculturalism
, 28, 220, 232–233

Multimedia presentation, production of
, 77–78

Multipolarity
, 58

Multistage approach
, 79

Naas focus group discussion
, 117, 126, 136, 147, 170

Nation building
, 38–42

Nation State
, 25–35

Nation state perpetuating migration controls and nationalism
, 185–189

National identity
, 22, 26

National parallelism
, 38, 100

Nationalism
, 7, 9, 22, 24, 27, 32, 38, 45, 220

nation state perpetuating migration controls and
, 185–189

Nationality
, 26

Native
, 116, 120

Nativism
, 38

Naturalization
, 55

Neo-colonial capitalism
, 59

Neo-colonialism
, 56, 59

Neo-colonialism/neo-imperialism
, 61

Neo-liberal governmentality
, 24, 32–33, 182, 193, 224

Neo-liberalist governmentality
, 224

Neoliberal governance
, 62

Neoliberalism
, 9, 32–33, 39, 56–57, 62, 181, 190

Neopragmatic perspective
, 70

Neopragmatic utilitarian approach
, 70

Nihilistic determinism
, 4

Non-governance
, 226

Notions of home, wider family as lineage to
, 98–103

Novel research model
, 70

Open access and closed entry
, 233–237

Opportunism
, 188

Ordo-liberal liquid modernity
, 15

Ordo-liberal perspective
, 189

Ordo-liberal society
, 236

Ordo-liberalism
, 39, 56, 236

Otherness
, 133, 138

relic of
, 56–61

Ownership
, 46, 181

Parochialism
, 93, 105, 111, 213–214

Participants
, 86, 221

Clan, feudalism and Grudges, 105–107

community unifies or community of distinction
, 107–114

genealogical lineage and Clan, 103–105

immediate family, cultural transmission and sacrifice, 94–98

wider family as lineage to irishness and notions of home
, 98–103

Participatory development
, 67

Participatory process
, 75

Patriotic cosmopolitan
, 186

Patriotism
, 45–46, 216

Perceived Irishness
, 237–239

Perceived rational pragmatism
, 15, 170, 202, 205–206, 209–210, 225–233, 239

in conversation
, 190–196

Perceived rational pragmatist
, 194

Performativity
, 24, 68, 138

Personhood concept
, 228

Phenotypical Irishness
, 221

Physiological traits
, 152

Political conservatism
, 204

Political conservativism
, 184

Political racelessness
, 9

Politics of immigration
, 20

Polity-public
, 7

Positive collective action
, 107

Post-modernists
, 22

Post-national nation state
, 49

Post-nationalism
, 7

Post/late-modernist relativism
, 70

Postcolonial/post-colonialism
, 23

Posteriori knowledge
, 228

Postscript
, 239–243

Power
, 29

Pragmatism
, 192

“Pre-modern” societies
, 4

Pride
, 126

Primordialism
, 20

Print media
, 26

Progressive self-constitution
, 62–64

Protectionism
, 164, 235

Pseudo-objectivity
, 47

Pseudo-rational condition
, 229

Pseudonyms
, 86

Pseudotranscendental concepts
, 230

Qualitative approach
, 15

Qualitative participatory
, 69

‘Race’
, 8–9, 27, 39, 44, 61, 97, 112, 133, 136, 141, 146, 149, 154, 165–166, 188, 212–213, 217–218, 220–222, 233

genealogical assumptions and notions of
, 142–143

as imaginary and ‘race’ as reality
, 145–147

Irish
, 147, 216

social construction
, 139, 210

Racial distinction
, 131, 134, 141

reification fallacy of
, 147–152

Racial neoliberalism
, 9

Racialization
, 14, 36

of Irishness
, 27

of state
, 51

Racialized and ethnicized globalization
, 1

Racio-ethnic
, 8–9

constructions
, 8

injustices
, 9

Raciology
, 8

Racism
, 27, 184, 204, 236, 238

Rational justification
, 238

Reciprocity
, 73–75, 173

Reconciliation
, 47

Reflexive conscience
, 52

Reflexive self-constitutionality
, 74

Regionalism
, 12, 170, 199–207

Regionalization
, 1–2, 12

Regressive nationalism
, 39, 41, 62

Reification fallacy
, 20, 30, 165, 221

of ethnic and racial distinction
, 147–152

Republicanism
, 46

Research methodology
, 88

building reciprocity between individual and collective, 73–75

design innovation
, 75–77

ethical considerations
, 86–87

iterative approach to constructivist grounded theory
, 70–71

limitations and reflections
, 88–89

main stage
, 78–86

methodological justification
, 71–73

preliminary stage
, 77–78

Revivalism
, 31

Sacrifice
, 94–98

Segregation
, 110

of ‘Irish’ and being Irish Citizen, 130–132

Self-constitutionality
, 52

Self-subscription
, 102, 115, 133

Singular collective community
, 107

Social change
, 115, 222

Social construction
, 24

of identities and knowledge-based society
, 2–5

Social constructivism
, 17, 23, 31, 63

essentialism within
, 20–24

Social constructivist approach
, 21, 48

Social Darwinian evolutionary narrative
, 216

Social Darwinism
, 223

Social evolutionism
, 118, 216

Social racism
, 236

Social transformation
, 165

Socialization
, 4

Societal change
, 115

referencing history in relation to
, 118–121

Societal transformations
, 154–160

Socio-cultural capital
, 204

Sovereignty
, 125

Space-time
, 7

State administration
, 58

State of exception
, 34

Status quo
, 4

of Irish society
, 197

positions
, 183

Subhumanist falsities
, 239

Subject constitution
, 27

Subjectification
, 18, 34, 51, 137–138

Subjectifiction
, 24

Subjectivity
, 6

Substantive identity
, 43

Substantive knowledge
, 6

Subsumption pathway
, 60, 148

Supranational governance
, 12, 60

Sympathy
, 233

Technologies of self
, 33

‘The other’
, 115, 126, 230

Thematic approach
, 82

Tolerant universalist post-nationalism
, 62

Trans-Europeanization
, 73

Transcendental concepts
, 230

Transcendental idealism
, 230

Transnational capitalism
, 185, 204

Transnationalism
, 202, 205, 227

UNESCO
, 3, 5

Universalism
, 28, 47

Universalist post-nationalism
, 62

Utilitarian approach
, 41

Utilitarian liberalist
, 38

Welfare state model
, 182, 204, 223

Westernization
, 4

Younger participants
, 233