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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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A new style of urbanization in China: Transformation of urban rural communities

TL;DR: In this paper, a new urban rural relationship driven by culture creativity linking to the filed practice in two Chengbiancun cases in China has been discovered, where culture creativity, public participatory, local authorities, and community planning can eventually assist an outcome of more satisfactory in this urban rural transition movement.
Book ChapterDOI

Interviews and Conversations

TL;DR: The United Nations Geneva Library http://www.wdlgeneva.org/projects as discussed by the authors http://corpus1.loc.at/fackel/ Der Weg zur Vollendung online: www.simplicissimus.info/ www.memoryatwar.fr
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Social Cohesion: A Conceptual and Political Elucidation

TL;DR: In this article, a European perspective on the relationship between differing views of social cohesion and urban policy and how its relation to competitiveness is inherent to contemporary EU cohesion discourse is explored. But the ambiguity of policy orientations that seek an answer to this failing functionalisation is examined.
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Immigration and the American Century

TL;DR: The full impact of immigration on American society is obscured in policy and academic analyses that focus on the short-term problems of immigrant adjustment, but over time, while immigrants and their descendants become more “American,” the character of American society and culture is transformed.
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Sojourners in Mexico with U.S. School Experience: A New Taxonomy for Transnational Students

TL;DR: In this article, the authors build an understanding of transnational students from Mexico and find that most of them expect to return to the United States someday, although not necessarily permanently, and they variously identify as Mexican, Mexican American, or American.