Nationalism in the Middle East: the Development of Jordanian National Identity Since the Disengagement of 1988

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Nationalism in the Middle East: the Development of Jordanian National Identity Since the Disengagement of 1988 Durham E-Theses Nationalism in the Middle East: The development of Jordanian national identity since the disengagement of 1988 ABDUL-HADI, AHMAD,OMAR,BAHJAT How to cite: ABDUL-HADI, AHMAD,OMAR,BAHJAT (2016) Nationalism in the Middle East: The development of Jordanian national identity since the disengagement of 1988, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/11770/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk 2 Nationalism in the Middle East: The development of Jordanian national identity since the disengagement of 1988 Name: Ahmad Omar Bahjat Abdul-Hadi A Thesis submitted for a Degree of Doctor Of Philosophy At The school of Government and International Affairs Durham University 2016 1 2 Abstract This thesis attempts to explain the development of national identity in Jordan in the post-disengagement period since 1988. National identity in Jordan has come full circle with the announcement of the ‘Jordan First’ policy. The Jordan First policy was enunciated to put the interest of the country first over other influences that were perceived to be inimical to the development of a strong national identity. After the Second World War, Jordan was still unsure of its national identity and its place in the Middle East state system. The rise of nationalism as one of the chief ideological instruments in many cases in the region soon found traction in Jordan as well, and led the country’s authorities to apply nationalism to the development of the national identity. Nationalism has become one of the primary dynamics for the development of national identity in Jordan. Within the context provided, this thesis, thus, explains the evolution of nationalism in Jordan and its impact on identity politics in the post- disengagement period since 1988. 3 Acknowledgements: I offer my sincerest gratitude and thanks to Professor Ehteshami and Professor Emma Murphy for their patience, hard work and unstinting support. I want to thank Professor Clive Jones for his help and guidance during the review panel stages, Dr Christian Schweiger for his help in the early stages of the review. I want to thank Mr mamtimyn sunudoula for his help in finding resources in the library and helping me with general literature enquires. I want to thank my parents for their continuous support and them believing in me and my project. My Family members including my brothers who always supported me in difficult and challenging times. I must signal out my uncle who was always happy to give me his precious time and listen to the progress of my research work whenever I travel to Jordan. In the spring/summer 2013 a number of people helped me in my fieldwork research in Amman. These people are: Dr Hasan Momani Head of Politics Department University of Jordan, Dr Jawad Al Anani, former deputy Jordanian Prime Minister and foreign minister, His excellency Dr Marouf Al Bakheit Former Prime minister from November 2005 until November 2007 and from February 2011 to 17 October 2011. His Excellency Abdulsalam Al Majali former Prime Minister in the period 1993-1995 and also signed the peace Accord between Jordan and Israel in 1994. 4 Table of Contents Abstract ............................................................................................................................ 3 Thesis Structure .............................................................................................................. 9 Introduction: Modern History of Jordan from the 1950s to the Disengagement of 1988 ................................................................................................................................ 11 I. The early years of King Hussein’s rule and the 1950s ........................................... 14 II Jordanian nationalism in the 1960s and the Six Day War, 1967. ........................... 30 (i) The Samu raid 1966 .......................................................................................... 31 (ii). The unification of the West Bank ................................................................... 33 (iii) The West Bank ............................................................................................... 39 (iv) Jerusalem ........................................................................................................ 42 (v) Jerusalem’s role in the 1967 war ..................................................................... 44 III Black September 1970 .......................................................................................... 46 (i) Events prior to September 1970 ....................................................................... 46 (ii) ‘Black September’ 1970 .................................................................................. 48 IV. Jordan in the 1980s (pre disengagement) ............................................................ 54 Conclusion ................................................................................................................. 58 Chapter One: Nationalism and Ethnicity in Jordan ................................................. 60 I. Early theories of nationalism .................................................................................. 61 II. Modernist approaches to nationalism .................................................................... 68 III. Gellner’s structuralist theory ................................................................................ 71 IV. The Kohn Dichotomy .......................................................................................... 75 V. Gellner and nationalism ........................................................................................ 80 VI. Definition of Arab Nationalism ........................................................................... 85 VII. Prominent thinkers on Arab nationalism ............................................................ 86 VIII. A conceptual discussion of nationalism in Jordan ............................................ 88 IX. The ethnic factor in Middle Eastern politics ........................................................ 92 XI. Politics of ethnicity and the Middle Eastern state ................................................ 95 Conclusion ................................................................................................................. 99 Literature review ...................................................................................................... 102 5 (i) From colonialism to Arab nationalism ........................................................... 102 (ii) Tribes and Bedouin ........................................................................................ 108 (iii) The military ..................................................................................................... 112 (iv) From Palestinians to Jordanians ......................................................................... 114 Methodological section ............................................................................................ 121 Chapter Two: Hashemite and Jordanian National Discourse since 1988 ............. 124 I. Hashemite discourse and tribes ............................................................................ 124 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 124 (i) Tribes and state formation in the Middle East ................................................ 126 (ii) Sub-societal divisions in the Middle East: tribal, ethnic or sectarian ............ 128 (iii) Tribes and the state in the Middle East ........................................................ 129 (iv) Who are the tribes of Jordan? ....................................................................... 130 Conclusion ........................................................................................................... 136 2. The Army and the Hashemite discourse .............................................................. 138 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 138 Conclusion ........................................................................................................... 146 3. The Palestinians and the Hashemite discourse .................................................... 147 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 147 Conclusion ........................................................................................................... 154 4. Jordan First and the Hashemite discourse. ........................................................... 155 Conclusion ........................................................................................................... 160 Chapter Three:
Recommended publications
  • Dual Naming of Sea Areas in Modern Atlases and Implications for the East Sea/Sea of Japan Case
    Dual naming of sea areas in modern atlases and implications for the East Sea/Sea of Japan case Rainer DORMELS* Dual naming is, to varying extents, present in nearly all atlases. The empirical research in this paper deals with the dual naming of sea areas in about 20 atlases from different nations in the years from 2006 to 2017. Objective, quality, and size of the atlases and the country where the atlases originated from play a key role. All these characteristics of the atlases will be taken into account in the paper. In the cases of dual naming of sea areas, we can, in general, differentiate between: cases where both names are exonyms, cases where both names are endonyms, and cases where one name is an endonym, while the other is an exonym. The goal of this paper is to suggest a typology of dual names of sea areas in different atlases. As it turns out, dual names of sea areas in atlases have different functions, and in many atlases, dual naming is not a singular exception. Dual naming may help the users of atlases to orientate themselves better. Additionally, dual naming allows for providing valuable information to the users. Regarding the naming of the sea between Korea and Japan present study has achieved the following results: the East Sea/Sea of Japan is the sea area, which by far showed the most use of dual naming in the atlases examined, in all cases of dual naming two exonyms were used, even in atlases, which allow dual naming just in very few cases, the East Sea/Sea of Japan is presented with dual naming.
    [Show full text]
  • Language, Culture, and National Identity
    Language, Culture, and National Identity BY ERIC HOBSBAWM LANGUAGE, culture, and national identity is the ·title of my pa­ per, but its central subject is the situation of languages in cul­ tures, written or spoken languages still being the main medium of these. More specifically, my subject is "multiculturalism" in­ sofar as this depends on language. "Nations" come into it, since in the states in which we all live political decisions about how and where languages are used for public purposes (for example, in schools) are crucial. And these states are today commonly iden­ tified with "nations" as in the term United Nations. This is a dan­ gerous confusion. So let me begin with a few words about it. Since there are hardly any colonies left, practically all of us today live in independent and sovereign states. With the rarest exceptions, even exiles and refugees live in states, though not their own. It is fairly easy to get agreement about what constitutes such a state, at any rate the modern model of it, which has become the template for all new independent political entities since the late eighteenth century. It is a territory, preferably coherent and demarcated by frontier lines from its neighbors, within which all citizens without exception come under the exclusive rule of the territorial government and the rules under which it operates. Against this there is no appeal, except by authoritarian of that government; for even the superiority of European Community law over national law was established only by the decision of the constituent SOCIAL RESEARCH, Vol.
    [Show full text]
  • Government and Administration of Jordan
    Government and administration of Jordan Item Type text; Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) Authors Awamleh, Fahed Said, 1927- Publisher The University of Arizona. Rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Download date 30/09/2021 16:17:52 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/348089 GOVERNMENT AND ADMINISTRATION ; OF JORDAN by Fah'ed S* ; Awarnl eh ■ A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of the . ' DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS AND:PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION . In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of ; : MASTER OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION - In the Graduate College THE UNIVERSITY OF'ARIZONA . STATEMENT BY AUTHOR This thesis has been submitted in partial fulfillment of re­ quirements for an advanced degree at The University of Arizona and is deposited in The University Library to be made available to bor­ rowers under rules of the Library. Brief quotations from this thesis are allowable without special permission, provided that accurate acknowledgment of source is made. Requests for permission for extended quotation from or reproduction of this manuscript in whole or in part may be granted by the head of the major department or the Dean of the Graduate College when in their judgment the proposed use of the material is in the interests of scholarship. In all other instances, however, permission must be obtained from the author. SIGNED APPROVAL BY THESIS DIRECTOR This thesis has been approved on the date shown below: / ; ? Paul Kelso Date Thesis Director : v • : ACESmEPGSMEm v ' ' ' ' I wish to-express, my gratitude and deep appreciation to all the peopier who contributed to the successful completion of this : thesis.
    [Show full text]
  • The Geographic Limits to Modernist Theories of Intra-State Violence
    The Power of Ethnicity?: the Geographic Limits to Modernist Theories of Intra-State Violence ERIC KAUFMANN Reader in Politics and Sociology, Birkbeck College, University of London; Religion Initiative/ISP Fellow, Belfer Center, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, Box 134, 79 John F. Kennedy St., Cambridge, MA 02138 [email protected] ——————————————————————————————————————————— Abstract This paper mounts a critique of the dominant modernist paradigm in the comparative ethnic conflict literature. The modernist argument claims that ethnic identity is constructed in the modern era, either by instrumentalist elites, or by political institutions whose bureaucratic constructions give birth to new identities. Group boundary symbols and myths are considered invented and flexible. Territorial identities in premodern times are viewed as either exclusively local, for the mass of the population, or ‘universal’, for elites. Primordialists and ethnosymbolists have contested these arguments using historical and case evidence, but have shied away from large-scale datasets. This paper utilizes a number of contemporary datasets to advance a three-stage argument. First, it finds a significant relationship between ethnic diversity and three pre- modern variables: rough topography, religious fractionalization and world region. Modernist explanations for these patterns are possible, but are less convincing than ethnosymbolist accounts. Second, we draw on our own and others’ work to show that ethnic fractionalization (ELF) significantly predicts the incidence of civil conflict, but not its onset . We argue that this is because indigenous ethnic diversity is relatively static over time, but varies over space. Conflict onsets, by contrast, are more dependent on short-run changes over time than incidents, which better reflect spatially-grounded conditioning factors.
    [Show full text]
  • Exonyms – Standards Or from the Secretariat  Message from the Secretariat 4
    NO. 50 JUNE 2016 In this issue Preface Message from the Chairperson 3 Exonyms – standards or From the Secretariat Message from the Secretariat 4 Special Feature – Exonyms – standards standardization? or standardization? What are the benefits of discerning 5-6 between endonym and exonym and what does this divide mean Use of Exonyms in National 6-7 Exonyms/Endonyms Standardization of Geographical Names in Ukraine Dealing with Exonyms in Croatia 8-9 History of Exonyms in Madagascar 9-11 Are there endonyms, exonyms or both? 12-15 The need for standardization Exonyms, Standards and 15-18 Standardization: New Directions Practice of Exonyms use in Egypt 19-24 Dealing with Exonyms in Slovenia 25-29 Exonyms Used for Country Names in the 29 Repubic of Korea Botswana – Exonyms – standards or 30 standardization? From the Divisions East Central and South-East Europe 32 Division Portuguese-speaking Division 33 From the Working Groups WG on Exonyms 31 WG on Evaluation and Implementation 34 From the Countries Burkina Faso 34-37 Brazil 38 Canada 38-42 Republic of Korea 42 Indonesia 43 Islamic Republic of Iran 44 Saudi Arabia 45-46 Sri Lanka 46-48 State of Palestine 48-50 Training and Eucation International Consortium of Universities 51 for Training in Geographical Names established Upcoming Meetings 52 UNGEGN Information Bulletin No. 50 June 2106 Page 1 UNGEGN Information Bulletin The Information Bulletin of the United Nations Group of Experts on Geographical Names (formerly UNGEGN Newsletter) is issued twice a year by the Secretariat of the Group of Experts. The Secretariat is served by the Statistics Division (UNSD), Department for Economic and Social Affairs (DESA), Secretariat of the United Nations.
    [Show full text]
  • History of Inter-Group Conflict and Violence in Modern Fiji
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Sydney eScholarship History of Inter-Group Conflict and Violence in Modern Fiji SANJAY RAMESH MA (RESEARCH) CENTRE FOR PEACE AND CONFLICT STUDIES UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY 2010 Abstract The thesis analyses inter-group conflict in Fiji within the framework of inter-group theory, popularised by Gordon Allport, who argued that inter-group conflict arises out of inter-group prejudice, which is historically constructed and sustained by dominant groups. Furthermore, Allport hypothesised that there are three attributes of violence: structural and institutional violence in the form of discrimination, organised violence and extropunitive violence in the form of in-group solidarity. Using history as a method, I analyse the history of inter-group conflict in Fiji from 1960 to 2006. I argue that inter- group conflict in Fiji led to the institutionalisation of discrimination against Indo-Fijians in 1987 and this escalated into organised violence in 2000. Inter-group tensions peaked in Fiji during the 2006 general elections as ethnic groups rallied behind their own communal constituencies as a show of in-group solidarity and produced an electoral outcome that made multiparty governance stipulated by the multiracial 1997 Constitution impossible. Using Allport’s recommendations on mitigating inter-group conflict in divided communities, the thesis proposes a three-pronged approach to inter-group conciliation in Fiji, based on implementing national identity, truth and reconciliation and legislative reforms. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This thesis is dedicated to the Indo-Fijians in rural Fiji who suffered physical violence in the aftermath of the May 2000 nationalist coup.
    [Show full text]
  • The Relationship Between Religion and State in Jordan: (Historical Perspective)
    International Journal of History and Cultural Studies (IJHCS) Volume 4, Issue 1, 2018, PP 47-55 ISSN 2454-7646 (Print) & ISSN 2454-7654 (Online) DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.20431/2454-7654.0401003 www.arcjournals.org The Relationship between Religion and State in Jordan: (Historical Perspective) Hani Ahmed Shboul* Al Balqa'a Applied University, Assalt- Jordan *Corresponding Author: Hani Ahmed Shboul, Al Balqa'a Applied University, Assalt- Jordan Abstract: Since its establishment, the Jordanian state has been characterized as a civil, not religious in the theocratic sense. The state has not established on a religious basis, nor has its legitimacy been based on a ‘religious ideology’. However, in contrast, it was not established on the basis of radical secularism, which entangles a confrontational spirit with conservative and religious trends in the society. Jordan has maintained a ‘balance’ between civil and religious requirements, and preserves this trait since its inception to this time, and through generations of successive kings: Abdullah I, Talal, Hussein and Abdullah II. The country did not come out from this public line at any stage, and this balance remained a key feature of Jordan’s policy. This study aims at identifying the type of relationship between religion and state in Jordan, in other words, how the Jordanian state manages its relationship with religion. Keywords: Jordan, King, Civil State, Balance, Secular, Religion. 1. INTRODUCTION Since the establishment of the Emirate of Transjordan in 1921 by its founder, Prince Abdullah bin Al Hussein, the state has achieved a stable and unchanged ‘balance’ in its relationship with religion (Islam)1.
    [Show full text]
  • Predicting Ethnic Boundaries Sun-Ki Chai
    European Sociological Review VOLUME 21 NUMBER 4 SEPTEMBER 2005 375–391 375 DOI:10.1093/esr/jci026, available online at www.esr.oxfordjournals.org Online publication 22 July 2005 Predicting Ethnic Boundaries Sun-Ki Chai It is increasingly accepted within the social sciences that ethnic boundaries are not fixed, but contingent and socially constructed. As a result, predicting the location of ethnic boundaries across time and space has become a crucial but unresolved issue, with some scholars arguing that the study of ethnic boundaries and predictive social science are fun- damentally incompatible. This paper attempts to show otherwise, presenting perhaps the first general, predictive theory of ethnic boundary formation, one that combines a coher- ence-based model of identity with a rational choice model of action. It then tests the the- ory’s predictions, focusing in particular on the size of populations generated by alternative boundary criteria. Analysis is performed using multiple datasets containing information about ethnic groups around the world, as well as the countries in which they reside. Perhaps the best-known innovation in contemporary encompassing all ascriptively-based group boundaries, theories of ethnicity is the idea that ethnic boundaries including those based upon race, religion, language, are not predetermined by biology or custom, but malle- and/or region. Characteristics such as religion, language, able and responsive to changes in the surrounding social and region are viewed as ascriptive rather than cultural environment. Ethnicity is seen to be socially con- because they are typically defined for purposes of ethnic- structed, and the nature of this construction is seen to ity to refer not to the current practice or location of indi- vary from situation to situation.1 This in turn has linked viduals, but rather to their lineage, the customs of their to a more general concern with the contruction of social ancestors.
    [Show full text]
  • Nationalism and Ethnosymbolism History, Culture and Ethnicity in the Formation of Nations
    A/459272 NATIONALISM AND ETHNOSYMBOLISM HISTORY, CULTURE AND ETHNICITY IN THE FORMATION OF NATIONS edited by Athena S. Leoussi and Steven Grosby EDINBURGH UNIVERSITY PRESS CONTENTS Notes on the Contributors v Introduction i I Theories of Nationalism and the Ethnosymbolic Approach i Mapping the Field: Theories of Nationalism and the Ethnosymbolic Approach Daniele Convent 15 i The Ethnic Enigma: Nationalism, Racism and Globalisation John Stone and Polly Rizova 31 3 Warfare, Remembrance and National Identity John Hutchinson 42 II Music and Poetry in the Ethnosymbolic Approach 4 Music and Nationalism: Five Historical Moments Jim Samson 55 5 The Sound of England David Martin 68 6 Myth, History and Nationalism: Poetry of the British Isles David Aberbach 84 III Antiquity in the Ethnosymbolic Approach 7 The Successor Territory Steven Grosby 99 8 Ethnosymbolism in the Ancient Mediterranean World Sebastian Garman 113 IV Ethnosymbolism in Eastern Europe and Russia 9 The Jews and the Formation of Modern National Identity in Poland Joanna B. Michlic 129 10 Lev Gumilev and Russian National Identity During and After the Soviet Era MarkBassin 143 iv Nationalism and Ethnosymbolism 11 National Symbols: Ethnicity and Historical Continuity in Post-communist 'New Europe' Athena S. Leoussi 161 V Ethnosymbolism in the Middle East 12 Dilemmas of Middle East Politics John A. Armstrong 189 13 The Muslim Umma and the Formation of Middle Eastern Nationalisms Haim Gerber 209 14 Historical Ethno-symbols in the Emergence of the State of Israel Allon Gal 221 VI Ethnosymbolism in the Far East and India 15 Ethnosymbolism in China and Taiwan Peter Ferdinand 233 16 The Making of a Language of Patriotism in Modern Bengali Sudipta Kaviraj 248 VII Ethnosymbolism in Africa 17 Holy Nigerian Nationalisms Obi Igwara 267 18 Ethnic Demobilisation: The Case of the Afrikaners David Welsh and].
    [Show full text]
  • The Politics of Language in Eritrea: Equality of Languages Vs
    The Politics of Language In Eritrea: Equality Of Languages Vs. Bilingual Official Language Policy Redie Bereketeab The Nordic Africa Institute Uppsala, Sweden Email: [email protected] Redie Bereketeab is a researcher at the Nordic Africa Institute, Uppala, Sweden. He holds PhD in Sociology from the Department of Sociology at Uppsala University, Sweden. He has written several articles and book chapters. He is also the author of Eritrea: The Making of a Nation, 1890-1991, the Red Sea Press (2007), and State Building in Post-liberation Eritrea: Challenges, achievements and potentials, Adonis & Abbey Publishers (2009). Acknowledgement I am indebted to Kidane Hagos and Phyllis O’Neil therefore I extend my thanks to both. I will also extend my thanks to the anonymous reviewers. Abstract The article analyzes the discourse of politics of language in Eritrea. It argues that the language debate in Eritrea over equality of languages and bilingual official language policy is more about power relations than about language per se. It relates to politics of identity that derive from the construction of two identity formations as understood by political elites. Equality of languages is based on ethnic identity, whereas official language is based on the construction of supra-ethnic civic identity. According to the constructivist bilingual official language Arabic and Tigrinya are supposed to represent two different socio-cultural identity formations, notably, Islamic-Arabic and Christian-Tigrinya. Consequently, the official language policy debate could be construed to derive from politics of power relation where two groups of elites supposedly representing the two identity formations are engaged in power competition reflecting real or imaginary socio-cultural cleavage of respective identity.
    [Show full text]
  • Cultural Nationalism E R I C Ta Y L O R Wo O D S, 2016
    Cultural Nationalism E r i c Ta y l o r Wo o d s, 2016 INTRODUCTION Nationalism may involve the combination of culture and politics, but for many of its most prominent students, the former is subordinate to the latter. In this view, nationalist appeals to culture are a means to a political end; that is, the achievement of statehood. Hence, for Ernest Gellner (2006 [1983]: 124), culture is but an epiphenomenon, a ‘false- consciousness … hardly worth analyzing …’. For their part, Eric Hobsbawm and Terrence Ranger (1983) suggest that national traditions are ‘invented’ by elites concerned with the legitimization of state power. Similarly, John Breuilly (2006 [1982]: 11) defines national movements as ‘political movements … which seek to gain or exercise state power and justify their objectives in terms of nationalist doctrine’. A broadly similar characterization of nationalism can be found in the writings of many other esteemed scholars (Giddens, 1985; Laitin, 2007; Mann, 1995; Tilly, 1975). The privileging of politics over culture remains the dominant approach to understanding nationalism, but it is not without criticism. There is now a vast and rapidly growing body of literature insisting that the role of culture should be made more prominent. In opposition to the argument that nationalist appeals to culture are but an exercise in legitimation, this body of literature suggests that they can be ends unto themselves. This latter phenomenon, generally referred to as cultural nationalism, is the subject of this chapter. The chapter proceeds as follows. I begin with the definition and history of cultural nationalism before discussing several key themes in its study.
    [Show full text]
  • Approaches to Racial and Ethnic Classification
    ETHNIC CLASSIFICATION IN GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE: A CROSS-NATIONAL SURVEY OF THE 2000 CENSUS ROUND Ann Morning, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Department of Sociology New York University August 10, 2005 Author Contact Information: Department of Sociology Tel: (212) 992-9569 New York University Fax: (212) 995-4140 269 Mercer St., Rm. 445 Email: [email protected] New York, NY 10003-6687 This article is currently under review for journal publication. The author warmly thanks the following people and institutions for their contributions: Kevin Deardorff (U.S. Census Bureau); United Nations Statistical Division (Department of Economic and Social Affairs), Demographic and Social Statistics Branch (particularly Mary Chamie, Jeremiah Banda, Yacob Zewoldi, Margaret Mbogoni, Lisa Morrison-Puckett and intern Julia Alemany); International Programs Center, U.S. Census Bureau; Caroline Persell and Sylvia Simson (New York University); Leslie Stone (Inter-American Development Bank); Gerald Haberkorn (Secretariat of the Pacific Community); and Patrick Corr (Australian Bureau of Statistics). I also wish to thank the attendees at the following presentations of this research: U.S. Census Bureau Migration Speaker Series; Population Association of America; International Union for the Scientific Study of Population; and the Demographic and Social Statistics Branch (United Nations) Speaker Series. The initial version of this research was funded by the U.S. Census Bureau Immigration Statistics Branch. However, the conclusions—and the shortcomings—are solely those of the author. ETHNIC CLASSIFICATION IN GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE: A CROSS-NATIONAL SURVEY OF THE 2000 CENSUS ROUND Ann Morning Department of Sociology New York University ABSTRACT Academic interest in official systems of racial and ethnic classification has grown in recent years, but most research on such census categories has been limited to small case studies or regional surveys.
    [Show full text]