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Nations and Nationalism since 1780: Programme, Myth, Reality. By E. J. Hobsbawm. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990. 191p. 39.50.

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This article is published in American Political Science Review.The article was published on 1991-09-01. It has received 2906 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Nationalism.

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How the past weighs on the present : Social representations of history and their role in identity politics

TL;DR: A narrative framework is presented to represent how collectively significant events become (selectively) incorporated in social representations that enable positioning of ethnic, national and supranational identities.

A glossary for social epidemiology.

TL;DR: Social epidemiology is distinguished by its insistence on explicitly investigating social determinants of population distributions of health, disease, and wellbeing, rather than treating such determinants as mere background to biomedical phenomena as mentioned in this paper.
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Narrative and the Cultural Psychology of Identity

TL;DR: This approach to the study of identity challenges personality and social psychologists to consider a cultural psychology framework that focuses on the relationship between master narratives and personal narratives of identity, recognizes the value of a developmental perspective, and uses ethnographic and idiographic methods.
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The Politics of Space, Time and Substance: State Formation, Nationalism, and Ethnicity

TL;DR: The relationship between common sense categories of experience and analytical concepts developed in order to understand the processes that produce such categories and effect their taken-for-grantedness is discussed in this paper.
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Collective Action and Network Structure

TL;DR: This paper developed and analyzed a mathematical model describing the relationship between individual contributions to a collective good and the network of social relations that makes these contributions interdependent, starting from the assumption that actors respond to the contributions of others because of efficacy concerns and norms offairness.