fbpx
Wikipedia

Irredentism

Irredentism is usually understood as a desire that one state annexes a territory of a neighboring state. This desire is motivated by ethnic reasons because the population of the territory is ethnically similar to the population of the parent state, or by historical reasons because the territory formed part of the parent state before. However, difficulties in applying the concept to concrete cases have given rise to academic disputes about its precise definition. Disagreements concern whether either or both ethnic and historical reasons have to be present, whether non-state actors can also engage in irredentism, and whether attempts to absorb a full neighboring state are also included. Various scholars discuss different types of irredentism. One categorization distinguishes between cases in which the parent state exists before the conflict and cases in which a new parent state is formed by uniting an ethnic group spread across several countries. Another distinction concerns whether the target country is a state, a former colony, or a collapsed state.

From top left to bottom right: territories claimed by Italian irredentism, Nazi Germany's annexation of the Sudetenland, Somalia's attempt to annex the Ogaden region, and Russia's annexation of Crimea and the claimed regions of Ukraine.

A central research topic concerning irredentism is the question of how it is to be explained or what causes it. Many explanations hold that ethnic homogeneity within a state makes irredentism more likely. Discrimination against the ethnic group in the neighboring territory is another contributing factor. A closely related explanation argues that national identities based primarily on ethnicity, culture, and history increase irredentist tendencies. Another approach is to explain irredentism as an attempt to increase power and wealth. In this regard, it is argued that irredentist claims are more likely if the neighboring territory is relatively rich. Many explanations also focus on the regime type and hold that democracies are less likely to engage in irredentism while anocracies are particularly open to it.

Irredentism has been an influential force in world politics since the mid-nineteenth century. It has been responsible for many armed conflicts even though international law is hostile to it and irredentist movements often fail to achieve their goals. The term was originally coined from the Italian phrase Italia irredenta and referred to an Italian movement after 1878 claiming parts of Switzerland and the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Often discussed cases of irredentism include Nazi Germany's annexation of the Sudetenland in 1938, Somalia's invasion of Ethiopia in 1977, Argentina's invasion of the Falkland Islands in 1982, attempts to establish a Greater Serbia following the breakup of Yugoslavia in the early 1990s, and Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014. Irredentism is closely related to revanchism and secession. Revanchism is an attempt to annex territory belonging to another state. It is motivated by the negative goal of taking revenge for a previous grievance, in contrast to the positive goal of irredentism of building an ethnically unified nation state. In the case of secession, a territory breaks away and forms an independent state instead of merging with another state.

Definition and etymology

 
The term irredentism originated from the Italian phrase Italia irredenta. The green and purple areas in this map of Italy from 1919 show some of the areas claimed by Italian irredentists.

The term irredentism was coined from the Italian phrase Italia irredenta (unredeemed Italy). This phrase originally referred to territory controlled by Austria-Hungary but mostly or partly inhabited by ethnic Italians, chiefly Trentino and Trieste, but also Gorizia, Istria, Fiume, and Dalmatia during the 19th and early 20th centuries.[1][2][3] Irredentist projects often use the term "Greater" to label the desired outcome of their expansion, as in "Greater Serbia" or "Greater Russia".[4][2]

Irredentism is often understood as the claim that certain territories belonging to one state should be incorporated into another state because their population is ethnically similar or because it historically belonged to the other state before.[5][6][1] Many definitions of irredentism have been proposed to give a more precise formulation. Despite a wide overlap concerning its general features, there are still many disagreements about its exact characterization.[7][8] These disagreements matter for evaluating whether irredentism was the cause of a war is difficult in many cases and different definitions often lead to opposite conclusions.[7][9]

There is wide consensus that irredentism is a form of territorial dispute involving the attempt to annex territories belonging to a neighboring state. However, not all such attempts constitute forms of irredentism and there is no academic consensus on precisely what other features need to be present. This concerns disagreements about who claims the territory, for what reasons they do so, and how much territory is claimed.[7][4][10] Most scholars define irredentism as a claim made by one state on the territory of another state.[7] In this regard, there are three essential entities to irredentism: (1) an irredentist state or parent state, (2) a neighboring host state or target state, and (3) the disputed territory belonging to the host state, often referred to as irredenta.[11][12] According to this definition, popular movements demanding territorial change by non-state actors do not count as irredentist in the strict sense. A different definition characterizes irredentism as the attempt of the ethnic minority of the territory to be incorporated to break away and join their real motherland even though this minority is a non-state actor.[7]

Another issue concerns the motivation for engaging in the territorial dispute. Some scholars hold irredentism is primarily motivated by ethnicity. On this view, the population in the neighboring territory is ethnically similar and the intention is to unite ethnically kindred people and to retrieve the area they live in.[7][4] This definition implies, for example, that the majority of the border disputes in the history of Latin America were not forms of irredentism.[10] Usually, irredentism is defined in terms of the motivation of the irredentist state, even if the territory is annexed against the will of the local population.[11] Other theorists focus more on the historical claim that the disputed territory used to be part of the state's ancestral homeland.[7][4] This is close to the literal meaning of the original Italian expression "terra irredenta" as unredeemed land.[6][13] On this view, the ethnicity of the people inhabiting this territory is not important. However, it is also possible to combine both characterizations, i.e. that the motivation is either ethnic or historical or both.[7][12][2] Some scholars, like Benjamin Neuberger, include geographical reasons in their definitions.[5][4]

 
It depends on the definition of irredentism whether South Korea's and North Korea's claim over the entire Korean Peninsula constitutes a form of irredentism.

A further disagreement concerns the amount of area that is to be annexed. Usually, irredentism is restricted to the attempt to incorporate some parts of another state.[7] In this regard, irredentism challenges established borders with the neighboring state but does not challenge the existence of the neighboring state in general.[14] However, some definitions of irredentism also include attempts to absorb the whole neighboring state and not just a part of it. In this sense, claims by both South Korea and North Korea to incorporate the whole of the Korean Peninsula would be considered a form of irredentism.[7]

A popular view combining many of the elements listed above holds that irredentism is based on incongruence between the borders of a state and the boundaries of the corresponding nation. State borders are usually clearly delimited, both physically and on maps. National boundaries, on the other hand, are less tangible since they correspond to a group's perception of its historic, cultural, and ethnic boundaries.[7] Irredentism may manifest if state borders do not correspond to national boundaries. It seeks to enlarge a state to establish a congruence between its borders and the boundaries of the corresponding nation.[15][16]

Types

Somalia's occupation of Ethiopian territory constitutes a typical case of irredentism between two states (left). The desire to create a Kurdistan state composed of Kurds living in Iraq, Iran, Syria, and Turkey is an unusual type of irredentism since there is no pre-existing state to absorb the territories (right).

Various types of irredentism have been proposed. However, not everyone agrees that all the types listed here actually constitute forms of irredentism and it often depends on what definition is used.[7][17][18] According to Naomi Chazan and Donald L. Horowitz, there are two types of irredentism. The typical case involves one state that intends to annex territories belonging to a neighboring state. Nazi Germany’s claim on the Sudetenland of Czechoslovakia is an example of this form of irredentism.[4][2][18] For the second type, there is no pre-existing parent state. Instead, a cohesive group existing as a minority in multiple countries intends to unify to form a new parent state. The intended creation of a Kurdistan state uniting the Kurds living in Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran is an example of the second type. If such a project is successful for only one segment, the result is secession and not irredentism. This happened, for example, during the breakup of Yugoslavia when Yugoslavian Slovenes formed the new state of Slovenia while the Austrian Slovenes did not join them and remained part of Austria.[4][18] Not all theorists accept that the second type actually constitutes a form of irredentism. In this regard, it is often argued that it is too similar to secession to maintain a distinction between the two. For example, Benyamin Neuberger holds that a pre-existing parent state is necessary for irredentism.[4]

Thomas Ambrosio restricts his definition to cases involving a pre-existing parent state and distinguishes three types of irredentism: (1) between two states, (2) between a state and a former colony, and (3) between a state and a collapsed state. The typical case is between two states. A classical example of this is Somalia's invasion of Ethiopia.[9][19] In the second case of decolonization, the territory to be annexed is a former colony of another state and not a regular part of it. An example is the Indonesian invasion and occupation of the former Portuguese colony of East Timor.[9][20] In the case of state collapse, one state disintegrates and a neighboring state absorbs some of its former territories, as was the case for the irredentist movements by Croatia and Serbia during the breakup of Yugoslavia.[9][21]

Explanations

Explanations of irredentism try to determine what causes irredentism, how it unfolds, and how it can be peacefully resolved.[17] Various hypotheses have been proposed but there is still very little consensus on how irredentism is to be explained despite its prevalence and its long history of provoking armed conflicts.[2][22] Some of these proposals can be combined but others conflict with each other and the available evidence may not be sufficient to decide between them.[11] An active research topic in this regard concerns the reasons for irredentism. Many countries have ethnic kin outside their borders. But only few are willing to engage in violent conflicts to annex foreign territory in an attempt to unite their kin. Research on the causes of irredentism tries to explain why some countries pursue irredentism but others do not.[23][24] Relevant factors often discussed include ethnicity, nationalism, economic considerations, the desire to increase power, and the type of regime.[4][2][22]

Ethnicity and nationalism

 
Hungarian irredentism in the 1930s led Hungary to form an alliance with Nazi Germany.[25][26]

A common explanation of irredentism focuses on ethnic arguments.[4][2][27] It is based on the observation that irredentist claims are primarily advanced by states with a homogenous ethnic population. This is explained by the idea that, if a state is composed of several different ethnic groups, then annexing a territory inhabited primarily by one of those groups would shift the power balance in favor of this group. For this reason, other groups in the state are likely to internally reject the irredentist claims. This inhibiting factor is not present for homogenous states. A similar argument is also offered for the enclave to be annexed: an ethnically heterogenous enclave is less likely to desire to be absorbed by another state for ethnic reasons since this would only benefit one ethnic group.[2][27] These considerations explain, for example, why irredentism is not very common in Africa since most African states are ethnically heterogeneous.[2] Relevant factors for the ethnic motivation for irredentism are how large the dominant ethnic group is relative to other groups, how large it is in absolute terms, whether it is relatively dispersed or located in a small core area, and whether it is politically disadvantaged.[24]

Explanations focusing on nationalism are closely related to ethnicity-based explanations.[2][14] Nationalism can be defined as the claim that the boundaries of a state should match those of the nation.[28][29] According to constructivist accounts, for example, the dominant national identity is one of the central factors behind irredentism. On this view, identities based on ethnicity, culture, and history can easily invite tendencies to enlarge national borders with the goal of integrating ethnically and culturally similar territories. Civic national identities focusing more on a political nature, on the other hand, are more closely tied to pre-existing national boundaries. Structural accounts use a slightly different approach and focus on the relation between nationalism and the regional context, specifically on the tension between state sovereignty and national self-determination.[2] State sovereignty is the principle of international law holding that each state has sovereignty over its own territory, meaning that states are not allowed to interfere with essentially domestic affairs of other states.[30] National self-determination, on the other hand, concerns the right of people to determine their own international political status.[31] According to the structural explanation, emphasis on national self-determination may legitimize irredentist claims while the principle of state sovereignty defends the status quo of the existing sovereign borders. This position is supported by the observation that irredentist conflicts are much more common during times of international upheavals.[2]

Another factor commonly cited as a force fueling irredentism is discrimination against the main ethnic group in the enclave.[32] Irredentist states often try to legitimize their aggression against neighbors by presenting them as humanitarian interventions aimed at protecting their discriminated ethnic kin. This justification was used, for example, in Adolf Hitler's irredentist annexation of the Sudetenland, in Armenia's intervention in Nagorno-Karabakh, and in Russia's annexation of Crimea.[22] Some theorists, like David S. Siroky and Christopher W. Hale, hold that there is little empirical evidence for arguments based on ethnic homogeneity and discrimination. On this view, they are mainly used as a pretext to hide different goals, such as material gain.[13][27][33]

Another relevant factor is the outlook of the population inhabiting the territory to be annexed. The desire of the irredentist state to annex a foreign territory and the desire of that territory to be annexed do not always overlap.[34] In some cases, a minority group does not want to be annexed, as was the case for the Crimean Tatars in Russia's annexation of Crimea.[34][35] In other cases, a minority group would want to be annexed but the intended parent state is not interested.[34]

Power and economy

Various accounts emphasize the role of power and economic benefits as reasons for irredentism. Realist explanations focus on the power balance between the irredentist state and the target state: the more this power balance shifts in favor of the irredentist state, the more likely violent conflicts become. A key factor in this regard is also the reaction of the international community, i.e. whether irredentist claims are tolerated or rejected.[2] Irredentism can be used as a tool or pretext to increase the parent state's power.[13][33] Rational choice accounts are closely related but focus more on the internal power dynamics within the irredentist state. On this view, irredentism is a tool used by the elites to secure their political interests. They do so by appealing to popular nationalist sentiments. This can be used, for example, to gain public support against political rivals or to divert attention away from domestic problems.[2][36]

Other explanations focus on economic factors. For example, larger states enjoy certain advantages that come with having an increased market and decreased per capita cost of defense. However, there are also certain disadvantages to having a bigger state, such as the difficulties that come with accommodating a wider range of citizens' preferences.[37][38] Based on these lines of thought, it has been argued that states are more likely to advocate irredentist claims if the enclave is a relatively rich territory.[33][37]

Regime type

A further relevant factor is the regime type of both the irredentist state and the neighboring state. In this regard, it is often argued that democratic states are less likely to engage in irredentism. One reason cited is that their rule is more inclusive concerning all types of ethnic groups. Another is that democracies are in general less likely to engage in violent conflicts. This is closely related to democratic peace theory, which claims that democracies try to avoid armed conflicts with other democracies. This is also supported by the observation that most irredentist conflicts are started by authoritarian regimes.[2][32][39] However, irredentism constitutes a paradox for democratic systems since democratic ideals pertaining to the ethnic group can often be used to justify its claim, which may be interpreted as the expression of a popular will toward unification. But there are also cases of irredentism made primarily by a government that are not broadly supported by the population.[14] According to David S. Siroky and Christopher W. Hale, anocratic regimes are most likely to engage in irredentist conflicts and to become their victim. This is based on the idea that they share certain democratic ideals favoring irredentism but often lack institutional stability and accountability. This makes it more likely for the elites to consolidate their power using ethno-nationalist appeals to the masses.[32]

Importance, reactions, and consequences

 
In the Iran–Iraq War (1980–1988), Saddam Hussein's Iraq claimed it had the right to hold sovereignty to the east bank of the Shatt al-Arab river held by Iran.[40] The war claimed the lives of more than a million people.[41]

Irredentism is a widespread phenomenon and has been an influential force in world politics since the mid-nineteenth century. It has been responsible for countless conflicts. There are still many unresolved irredentist disputes today that constitute discords between countries.[2][14][42] In this regard, irredentism is a potential source of conflict in many places and often escalates into military confrontations between states.[4][13][16] For example, Markus Kornprobst argues that "no other issue over which states fight is as war-prone as irredentism"[42] and Rachel Walker points out that "there is scarcely a country in the world that is not involved in some sort of irredentist quarrel ... although few would admit to this".[14] Stephen M. Saideman and R. William Ayres argue that many of the most important conflicts of the 1990s were caused by irredentism, such as the wars for a Greater Serbia and a Greater Croatia.[24] Irredentism carries a lot of potential for future conflicts since many countries have kin groups in adjacent countries. It has been argued that it poses a significant danger to human security and the international order.[23] For these reasons, irredentism has been a central topic in the field of international relations.[2]

For the most part, international law is hostile to irredentism. For example, the United Nations Charter calls for respect for established territorial borders and defends state sovereignty. Similar outlooks are taken by the Organization of African Unity, the Organization of American States, and the Helsinki Final Act.[13] Since irredentist claims are based on conflicting sovereignty assertions, it is often difficult to find a working compromise.[14] Peaceful resolutions of irredentist conflicts often result in mutual recognition of de facto borders rather than territorial change.[15] Martin Griffiths et al. argue that the threat of rising irredentism may be reduced by focusing on political pluralism and respect for minority rights.[13]

Irredentist movements, peaceful or violent, are rarely successful.[13] In many cases, despite aiming to help ethnic minorities, irredentism often has the opposite effect and ends up worsening their living conditions. On the one hand, the state still in control of those territories may decide to further discriminate against them as an attempt to decrease the threat to its national security. On the other hand, the irredentist state may merely claim to care about the ethnic minorities but, in truth, use such claims only as a pretext to increase its territory or to destabilize an opponent.[13][33]

History

The emergence of irredentism is tied to the rise of modern nationalism and the idea of a nation state, which are often linked to the French Revolution.[5][4] However, some theorists, like Griffiths et al., argue that phenomena similar to irredentism existed even before. For example, part of the justification of the crusades was to liberate fellow Christians from Muslim rule and to redeem the Holy Land. Nonetheless, most theorists see irredentism as a more recent phenomenon associated with border disputes between modern states.[13] The term originally referred to an Italian movement after 1878 demanding that certain predominantly Italian-speaking areas in Switzerland and the Austro-Hungarian Empire should become part of Italy.[2][43]

 
The partition of Czechoslovakia from 1938 through 1939. The dark purple area shows the Sudetenland annexed by Nazi Germany.

Nazi Germany's annexation of the Sudetenland in 1938 is an often-cited example of irredentism. At the time, the Sudetenland formed part of Czechoslovakia but had a majority German population. Adolf Hitler justified the annexation based on his allegation that Sudeten Germans were being mistreated by the Czech government. The Sudetenland was yielded to Germany following the Munich Agreement in an attempt to prevent the outbreak of a major war.[17][44][45]

Somalia's invasion of Ethiopia in 1977 is frequently discussed as a case of African irredentism. The goal of this attack was to unite the significant Somali population living in the Ogaden region with their kin by annexing this area to create a Greater Somalia. The invasion escalated into a major war of attrition that lasted about eight months. Somalia was close to reaching its goal but failed in the end, mainly due to a massive intervention by socialist countries.[19][46][47]

 
The Falkland Islands are controlled by the United Kingdom but claimed by Argentina.

Argentina's invasion of the Falkland Islands is often cited as an example of irredentism in South America. In 1982, Argentina tried to seize the Falkland Islands. They were under British control since 1833 but Argentina's claims on them date back before that. Britain managed to decide the conflict in its favor and remained in control due to its superior military force and strong international support. Despite its defeat, Argentina has upheld its claim on the Falkland Islands to this day.[2][48][49]

The breakup of Yugoslavia in the early 1990s resulted in various irredentist projects. They include Slobodan Milošević's attempts to establish a Greater Serbia by absorbing various regions of neighboring states that were part of former Yugoslavia. A simultaneous similar project aimed at the establishment of a Greater Croatia.[9][21]

 
Regions of Ukraine annexed by Russia since 2014 (Crimea) and 2022 (Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia), with a red line marking the area of actual control by Russia on 30 September 2022.

Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014 is a more recent example of irredentism. It was justified based on the allegation that the Ukrainian government did not uphold the rights of ethnic Russians inhabiting Crimea.[23][50][51] However, it has been claimed that this was only a pretext to increase its territory and power.[23] Other frequently discussed cases of irredentism include disputes between Pakistan and India over Jammu and Kashmir as well as China's claims on Taiwan.[52][53]

Related concepts

Ethnicity

Ethnicity plays a central role in irredentism since most irredentist states justify their expansionist agenda based on shared ethnicity. In this regard, the goal of unifying different parts of an ethnic group in a common nation state is used as a justification for annexing foreign territories and going to war if the neighboring state resists.[5][6][2] Ethnicity is a grouping of people according to a set of shared attributes and similarities. It divides people into different groups based on attributes like physical features, customs, tradition, historical background, language, culture, religion, and values.[54][55][56] Not all these factors are equally relevant for every ethnic group. For some groups, one factor may predominate, as in ethno-linguistic, ethno-racial, and ethno-religious identities. In most cases, ethnic identities are based on several common features.[57][58] A central aspect of many ethnic identities is that all members share a common homeland or place of origin. This place of origin does not have to correspond to the area where the majority of the ethnic group currently lives in case they migrated from their homeland. Another feature is a common language or dialect. In many cases, religion also forms a vital aspect of ethnicity. Shared culture is another significant factor. It is a wide term and can include characteristic social institutions, diet, dress, and other practices. It is often difficult to draw clear boundaries between people based on their ethnicity.[56] For this reason, some definitions focus less on actual objective features and emphasize instead that what unites an ethnic group is a subjective belief that such common features exist. On this view, the common belief matters more than the extent to which those shared features actually exist.[56][57] Examples of large ethnic groups are the Han Chinese, the Arabs, the Bengalis, the Punjabis, and the Turks.[56][59]

Some theorists, like John Milton Yinger, use terms like ethnic group or ethnicity as near-synonyms for nation.[60] Nations are usually based on ethnicity. But what distinguishes them from ethnicity is their political form as a state or a state-like entity. The physical and visible aspects of ethnicity, such as skin color and facial features, are often referred to as race, which may thus be understood as a subset of ethnicity.[56] However, some theorists, like Pierre van den Berghe, contrast the two by restricting ethnicity to cultural traits and race to physical traits.[57]

Ethnic solidarity can provide a sense of belonging as well as physical and psychological security. It can help individuals identify with a common purpose.[56] However, ethnicity has also been the source of many conflicts. It has been responsible for various forms of mass violence, including ethnic cleansing and genocide. The perpetrators usually form part of the ruling majority and target ethnic minority groups.[56][61] Not all ethnic-based conflicts involve mass violence, like many forms of ethnic discrimination.[56] The term ethnicity originates in the Ancient Greek term ethnos, meaning "peoples".[61]

Nationalism and nation state

Irredentism is often understood as a product of modern nationalism, i.e. the claim that a nation should have its own sovereign state.[5][4] In this regard, irredentism emerged with and depends on the modern idea of nation states.[14] The start of modern nationalism is often associated with the French Revolution in 1789. This spawned various nationalist revolutions in Europe around the mid-nineteenth century. They often resulted in a replacement of dynastic imperial governments.[4] A central aspect of nationalism is that it sees states as entities with clearly delimited borders that should correspond to national boundaries.[14][15] Irredentism reflects the importance people ascribe to these borders and how exactly they are drawn. One difficulty in this regard is that the exact boundaries are often difficult to justify and are therefore challenged in favor of alternatives. Irredentism manifests some of the most aggressive aspects of modern nationalism.[13] It can be seen as a side effect of nationalism paired with the importance it ascribes to borders and the difficulties in agreeing on them.[14][62]

Secession

 
Changes in national boundaries after the end of the Cold War and the dissolution of the Soviet Union and breakup of Yugoslavia

Irredentism is closely related to secession.[2][24][63] Secession can be defined as "an attempt by an ethnic group claiming a homeland to withdraw with its territory from the authority of a larger state of which it is a part."[63] Irredentism, by contrast, is initiated by members of an ethnic group in one state to incorporate territories across their border housing ethnically kindred people.[63] Secession happens when a part of an existing state breaks away to form an independent entity. In the case of irredentism, the break-away area does not become independent but merges into another entity.[13][2][14] Irredentism is often seen as a government decision, unlike secession.[23] Both movements are influential phenomena in contemporary politics but, as Horowitz argues, secession movements are much more frequent in postcolonial states. However, he also holds that secession movements are less likely to succeed since they usually have very few military resources compared to irredentist states. For this reason, they normally require prolonged external assistance, often from another state.[64] However, such state policies are subject to change. For example, the Indian government supported the Sri Lankan Tamil secessionists until 1987 but then reach an agreement with the Sri Lankan government and helped suppress the movement.[65][66][67]

Horowitz holds that it is important to distinguish secessionist and irredentist movements since they differ significantly concerning their motivation, context, and goals.[64] Despite these differences, irredentism and secessionism are closely related nonetheless.[2][24] In some cases, the two tendencies may exist side by side. It is also possible that the advocates of one movement change their outlook and promote the other. Whether a movement favors irredentism or secessionism is determined, among other things, by the prospects of forming an independent state in contrast to joining another state.[68] A further factor is whether the irredentist state is likely to espouse a similar ideology to the one found in the territory intending to break away. The anticipated reaction of the international community is an additional factor, i.e. whether it would embrace, tolerate, or reject the detachment or the absorption by another state.[69]

Revanchism

Irredentism and Revanchism are two closely related phenomena since both involve the attempt to annex territory belonging to another state.[70][71][72] But they differ concerning the motivation fuelling this attempt. Irredentism has a positive goal of building a "greater" state that fulfills the ideals of a nation state: to unify people claimed to belong together because of their shared national identity based on ethnic, cultural, and historical aspects.[4][14][70] For revanchism, on the other hand, the goal is more negative and focuses on taking revenge for some form of grievance or injustice suffered earlier.[70][73][74] In this regard, it is motivated by resentment and aims to reverse territorial losses due to a previous defeat. In an attempt to distinguish irredentism from revanchism, Anna M. Wittmann argues that Germany's annexation of the Sudetenland in 1938 constitutes a form of irredentism because of its emphasis on a shared language and ethnicity. But she characterizes Germany's invasion of Poland the following year as a form of revanchism due to its justification as a revenge intended to reverse previous territorial losses.[70] The term "revanchism" comes from the French term revanche, meaning revenge.[70][72] It was originally used in the aftermath of the Franco-Prussian War for nationalists intending to reclaim the lost territory of Alsace-Lorraine.[70] Saddam Hussein justified the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990 by claiming that Kuwait had always been an integral part of Iraq and only became an independent nation due to the interference of the British Empire.[75]

See also

  • Ethnic nationalism – Ethnic identity-based political ideology
  • Expansionism – Consists of policies of states that involve territorial or economic expansion
  • Lebensraum – German "living space" ideas of settler colonialism (1890s–1940s)
  • Separatism – Advocacy for separation from a larger group
  • Secession – Act of withdrawing from an organization, union, military alliance or especially a political entity
  • Manifest destiny – Cultural belief of 19th-century American expansionists
  • Pan-nationalism – Nationalism beyond national boundaries
  • Phyletism – Conflation between church and nation
  • Rump state – Remnant of a once-larger state, left with a reduced territory
  • Status quo ante bellum – Latin phrase meaning "the state existing before the war"
  • Territorial dispute – Disagreement over the possession or control of land between countries or their subdivisions

References

  1. ^ a b Barrett, Cyril (18 January 2018). "irredentism". A Concise Oxford Dictionary of Politics and International Relations. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199670840.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Ambrosio, Thomas (7 September 2011). "irredentism". In Badie, Bertrand; Berg-Schlosser, Dirk; Morlino, Leonardo (eds.). International Encyclopedia of Political Science. SAGE Publications. pp. 1346–8. ISBN 9781452266497.
  3. ^ Stibbe, Matthew. "Italian Irredentism". 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o White & Millett 2019, p. 420.
  5. ^ a b c d e Lagasse, Paul; Goldman, Lora; Hobson, Archie; Norton, Susan R., eds. (2020). "Irredentism". Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th Edition. EBSCO: Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780787650155.
  6. ^ a b c White & Millett 2019, p. 419.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Kornprobst 2008, p. 8-10.
  8. ^ White & Millett 2019, p. 421.
  9. ^ a b c d e White & Millett 2019, p. 420-1.
  10. ^ a b Horowitz 2011, p. 160.
  11. ^ a b c Siroky & Hale 2017, p. 2.
  12. ^ a b White & Millett 2019, p. 419-20.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Griffiths, Martin; O'Callaghan, Terry; Roach, Steven C. (2008). International Relations: The Key Concepts. Taylor & Francis. pp. 175–7. ISBN 9780415774369.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Clarke, Paul Barry; Foweraker, Joe (16 December 2003). Encyclopedia of Democratic Thought. Routledge. pp. 375–6. ISBN 9781136908569.
  15. ^ a b c Kornprobst 2008, p. 7-8.
  16. ^ a b Hinnebusch, Professor of International Relations and Middle Politics Raymond (2002). The Foreign Policies of Middle East States. Lynne Rienner Publishers. pp. 7–8. ISBN 9781588260208.
  17. ^ a b c Ambrosio, Thomas. "irredentism". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  18. ^ a b c Horowitz 2011, p. 159.
  19. ^ a b Ackermann et al. 2008a, p. 143.
  20. ^ Ackermann et al. 2008a, p. 130.
  21. ^ a b Ackermann et al. 2008a, p. 49, 468-71.
  22. ^ a b c Siroky & Hale 2017, p. 8-9.
  23. ^ a b c d e Siroky & Hale 2017, p. 1.
  24. ^ a b c d e Saideman, Stephen M.; Ayres, R. William (2000). "Determining the Causes of Irredentism: Logit Analyses of Minorities at Risk Data from the 1980s and 1990s". The Journal of Politics. 62 (4): 1126–1144. doi:10.1111/0022-3816.00049. ISSN 0022-3816. JSTOR 2647868. S2CID 144804873.
  25. ^ Hames, Peter (2004). The Cinema of Central Europe. Wallflower Press. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-904764-20-5.
  26. ^ Hanebrink, Paul (5 September 2018). In Defense of Christian Hungary: Religion, Nationalism, and Antisemitism, 1890–1944. Cornell University Press. p. 140. ISBN 978-1-5017-2726-9.
  27. ^ a b c Siroky & Hale 2017, p. 2-3.
  28. ^ Hechter, Michael (2000). Containing Nationalism. Oxford University Press. p. 7. ISBN 9780198297420.
  29. ^ Gellner, Ernest (2008). Nations and Nationalism. Cornell University Press. p. 1. ISBN 9780801475009.
  30. ^ Charter of the United Nations. 1945.
  31. ^ "Self determination (international law)". LII / Legal Information Institute. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  32. ^ a b c Siroky & Hale 2017, p. 3.
  33. ^ a b c d Orabator, S. E. (1981). "Irredentism as a Pretext: The Western Sahara Case". Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria. 11 (1/2): 166–181. ISSN 0018-2540. JSTOR 41857111.
  34. ^ a b c Siroky & Hale 2017, p. 1-2.
  35. ^ Walker, Shaun (25 September 2022). "'A way to get rid of us': Crimean Tatars decry Russia's mobilisation". the Guardian. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
  36. ^ Siroky & Hale 2017, p. 4.
  37. ^ a b Siroky & Hale 2017, p. 1-3.
  38. ^ Bain, Joe S. "Economies of Scale". In Darity, William A. (ed.). International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. Macmillan Reference USA. ISBN 9780028659657.
  39. ^ Reiter, Dan. "Democratic Peace Theory". Oxford Bibliographies. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 23 December 2022.
  40. ^ Erik Goldstein, Erik (Dr.). Wars and Peace Treaties: 1816 to 1991. P133.
  41. ^ Hussain, Murtaza (9 March 2023). "The War in Ukraine Is Just Getting Started". The Intercept.
  42. ^ a b Kornprobst 2008, p. 11.
  43. ^ Gilman, D. C.; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). "Irredentism" . New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.
  44. ^ Knowles, Elizabeth (1 January 2006). "Sudetenland". The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198609810.
  45. ^ Ackermann et al. 2008, p. xxvi, 20.
  46. ^ Christie, Kenneth (1998). Ethnic Conflict, Tribal Politics: A Global Perspective. Psychology Press. p. 139. ISBN 9780700711185.
  47. ^ Tareke, Gebru (2000). "The Ethiopia-Somalia War of 1977 Revisited". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 33 (3): 635–667. doi:10.2307/3097438. ISSN 0361-7882. JSTOR 3097438.
  48. ^ Beck, P. J (1 April 2006). "The Falklands War". The English Historical Review. CXXI (491): 648–649. doi:10.1093/ehr/cel096.
  49. ^ Ackermann et al. 2008a, p. xxvi, 147-8.
  50. ^ Navarro, Armando (8 January 2015). Mexicano and Latino Politics and the Quest for Self-Determination: What Needs to Be Done. Lexington Books. p. 536. ISBN 9780739197363.
  51. ^ Batta, Anna (24 December 2021). The Russian Minorities in the Former Soviet Republics: Secession, Integration, and Homeland. Routledge. p. 2020. ISBN 9781000485578.
  52. ^ Kornprobst 2008, p. 4, 7-8.
  53. ^ Harding, Harry (1988). China and Northeast Asia: The Political Dimension. University Press of America. p. 59. ISBN 9780819165923.
  54. ^ Chandra, Kanchan (25 October 2012). Constructivist Theories of Ethnic Politics. Oxford University Press. pp. 64, 69–70. ISBN 9780199893157.
  55. ^ Richardson-Bouie, Deborale (2003). "Ethnic Variation/Ethnicity". In Ponzetti, James J. (ed.). International Encyclopedia of Marriage and Family. Macmillan Reference USA. ISBN 9780028656724.
  56. ^ a b c d e f g h Law, Ian. "Ethnicity". In Darity, William A. (ed.). International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. Macmillan Reference USA. ISBN 9780028659657.
  57. ^ a b c Alba, Richard D. (1992). "Ethnicity". In Borgatta, Edgar F.; Borgatta, Marie L. (eds.). Encyclopedia of Sociology. Macmillan. ISBN 9780028970516.
  58. ^ Taras, Raymond; Ganguly, Rajat (7 August 2015). "1. Ethnic Conflict on the World Stage: Definitions". Understanding Ethnic Conflict. Routledge. ISBN 9781317342823.
  59. ^ Radstone, Susannah; Wilson, Rita (6 September 2020). Translating Worlds: Migration, Memory, and Culture. Routledge. ISBN 9780429655999.
  60. ^ Yinger, John Milton (1 January 1994). Ethnicity: Source of Strength? Source of Conflict?. SUNY Press. p. 11. ISBN 9780791417973.
  61. ^ a b Sherrer, Christian P. (2005). Shelton, Dinah (ed.). Encyclopedia of Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity. Macmillan Reference. ISBN 9780028658506.
  62. ^ Kornprobst 2008, p. 10-1.
  63. ^ a b c Horowitz 2011, p. 158.
  64. ^ a b Horowitz 2011, p. 159-60.
  65. ^ Horowitz 2011, p. 162.
  66. ^ Senaratne, Kalana (2021). "Sri Lanka: A Case Study". Internal Self-Determination in International Law: History, Theory, and Practice. Cambridge University Press. pp. 155–194. ISBN 9781108484404.
  67. ^ Ackermann et al. 2008a, p. 403-4.
  68. ^ Horowitz 2011, p. 160-1.
  69. ^ Horowitz 2011, p. 161-2.
  70. ^ a b c d e f Wittmann, Anna M. (5 December 2016). Talking Conflict: The Loaded Language of Genocide, Political Violence, Terrorism, and Warfare. ABC-CLIO. pp. 301–2. ISBN 9781440834257.
  71. ^ Burnett, M. Troy (4 August 2020). Nationalism Today: Extreme Political Movements around the World [2 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. xvii. ISBN 9781440850004.
  72. ^ a b Nolan, Cathal J. (2002). The Greenwood Encyclopedia of International Relations: M-R. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 1400. ISBN 9780313323829.
  73. ^ Margalit, Avishai (12 October 2009). On Compromise and Rotten Compromises. Princeton University Press. p. 69. ISBN 9781400831210.
  74. ^ Ghervas, Stella (30 March 2021). Conquering Peace: From the Enlightenment to the European Union. Harvard University Press. p. 151. ISBN 9780674259089.
  75. ^ R. Stephen Humphreys, Between Memory and Desire: The Middle East in a Troubled Age, University of California Press, 1999, p. 105.

Sources

  • Ackermann, Marsha E.; Schroeder, Michael J.; Terry, Janice J.; Upshur, Jiu-Hwa Lo; Whitters, Mark F., eds. (2008). Encyclopedia of world history: Volume 5. New York: Facts on File. ISBN 9780816063864.
  • Ackermann, Marsha E.; Schroeder, Michael J.; Terry, Janice J.; Upshur, Jiu-Hwa Lo; Whitters, Mark F., eds. (2008a). Encyclopedia of world history: Volume 6. New York: Facts on File. ISBN 9780816063864.
  • Horowitz, Donald L. (2011). "13. Irredentas and secessions: adjacent phenomena, neglected connections". In Cordell, Karl; Wolff, Stefan (eds.). Routledge handbook of ethnic conflict. London: Routledge. pp. 158–68. ISBN 978-0203845493.
  • Kornprobst, Markus (18 December 2008). Irredentism in European Politics: Argumentation, Compromise and Norms. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521895583.
  • Siroky, David S.; Hale, Christopher W. (January 2017). "Inside Irredentism: A Global Empirical Analysis: Inside Irredentism". American Journal of Political Science. 61 (1): 117–128. doi:10.1111/ajps.12271.
  • White, W. George; Millett, Bruce (29 November 2019). Kobayashi, Audrey (ed.). International Encyclopedia of Human Geography. Elsevier. pp. 419–26. ISBN 9780081022962.

External links

irredentism, usually, understood, desire, that, state, annexes, territory, neighboring, state, this, desire, motivated, ethnic, reasons, because, population, territory, ethnically, similar, population, parent, state, historical, reasons, because, territory, fo. Irredentism is usually understood as a desire that one state annexes a territory of a neighboring state This desire is motivated by ethnic reasons because the population of the territory is ethnically similar to the population of the parent state or by historical reasons because the territory formed part of the parent state before However difficulties in applying the concept to concrete cases have given rise to academic disputes about its precise definition Disagreements concern whether either or both ethnic and historical reasons have to be present whether non state actors can also engage in irredentism and whether attempts to absorb a full neighboring state are also included Various scholars discuss different types of irredentism One categorization distinguishes between cases in which the parent state exists before the conflict and cases in which a new parent state is formed by uniting an ethnic group spread across several countries Another distinction concerns whether the target country is a state a former colony or a collapsed state From top left to bottom right territories claimed by Italian irredentism Nazi Germany s annexation of the Sudetenland Somalia s attempt to annex the Ogaden region and Russia s annexation of Crimea and the claimed regions of Ukraine A central research topic concerning irredentism is the question of how it is to be explained or what causes it Many explanations hold that ethnic homogeneity within a state makes irredentism more likely Discrimination against the ethnic group in the neighboring territory is another contributing factor A closely related explanation argues that national identities based primarily on ethnicity culture and history increase irredentist tendencies Another approach is to explain irredentism as an attempt to increase power and wealth In this regard it is argued that irredentist claims are more likely if the neighboring territory is relatively rich Many explanations also focus on the regime type and hold that democracies are less likely to engage in irredentism while anocracies are particularly open to it Irredentism has been an influential force in world politics since the mid nineteenth century It has been responsible for many armed conflicts even though international law is hostile to it and irredentist movements often fail to achieve their goals The term was originally coined from the Italian phrase Italia irredenta and referred to an Italian movement after 1878 claiming parts of Switzerland and the Austro Hungarian Empire Often discussed cases of irredentism include Nazi Germany s annexation of the Sudetenland in 1938 Somalia s invasion of Ethiopia in 1977 Argentina s invasion of the Falkland Islands in 1982 attempts to establish a Greater Serbia following the breakup of Yugoslavia in the early 1990s and Russia s annexation of Crimea in 2014 Irredentism is closely related to revanchism and secession Revanchism is an attempt to annex territory belonging to another state It is motivated by the negative goal of taking revenge for a previous grievance in contrast to the positive goal of irredentism of building an ethnically unified nation state In the case of secession a territory breaks away and forms an independent state instead of merging with another state Contents 1 Definition and etymology 2 Types 3 Explanations 3 1 Ethnicity and nationalism 3 2 Power and economy 3 3 Regime type 4 Importance reactions and consequences 5 History 6 Related concepts 6 1 Ethnicity 6 2 Nationalism and nation state 6 3 Secession 6 4 Revanchism 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Sources 9 External linksDefinition and etymology Edit The term irredentism originated from the Italian phrase Italia irredenta The green and purple areas in this map of Italy from 1919 show some of the areas claimed by Italian irredentists The term irredentism was coined from the Italian phrase Italia irredenta unredeemed Italy This phrase originally referred to territory controlled by Austria Hungary but mostly or partly inhabited by ethnic Italians chiefly Trentino and Trieste but also Gorizia Istria Fiume and Dalmatia during the 19th and early 20th centuries 1 2 3 Irredentist projects often use the term Greater to label the desired outcome of their expansion as in Greater Serbia or Greater Russia 4 2 Irredentism is often understood as the claim that certain territories belonging to one state should be incorporated into another state because their population is ethnically similar or because it historically belonged to the other state before 5 6 1 Many definitions of irredentism have been proposed to give a more precise formulation Despite a wide overlap concerning its general features there are still many disagreements about its exact characterization 7 8 These disagreements matter for evaluating whether irredentism was the cause of a war is difficult in many cases and different definitions often lead to opposite conclusions 7 9 There is wide consensus that irredentism is a form of territorial dispute involving the attempt to annex territories belonging to a neighboring state However not all such attempts constitute forms of irredentism and there is no academic consensus on precisely what other features need to be present This concerns disagreements about who claims the territory for what reasons they do so and how much territory is claimed 7 4 10 Most scholars define irredentism as a claim made by one state on the territory of another state 7 In this regard there are three essential entities to irredentism 1 an irredentist state or parent state 2 a neighboring host state or target state and 3 the disputed territory belonging to the host state often referred to as irredenta 11 12 According to this definition popular movements demanding territorial change by non state actors do not count as irredentist in the strict sense A different definition characterizes irredentism as the attempt of the ethnic minority of the territory to be incorporated to break away and join their real motherland even though this minority is a non state actor 7 Another issue concerns the motivation for engaging in the territorial dispute Some scholars hold irredentism is primarily motivated by ethnicity On this view the population in the neighboring territory is ethnically similar and the intention is to unite ethnically kindred people and to retrieve the area they live in 7 4 This definition implies for example that the majority of the border disputes in the history of Latin America were not forms of irredentism 10 Usually irredentism is defined in terms of the motivation of the irredentist state even if the territory is annexed against the will of the local population 11 Other theorists focus more on the historical claim that the disputed territory used to be part of the state s ancestral homeland 7 4 This is close to the literal meaning of the original Italian expression terra irredenta as unredeemed land 6 13 On this view the ethnicity of the people inhabiting this territory is not important However it is also possible to combine both characterizations i e that the motivation is either ethnic or historical or both 7 12 2 Some scholars like Benjamin Neuberger include geographical reasons in their definitions 5 4 It depends on the definition of irredentism whether South Korea s and North Korea s claim over the entire Korean Peninsula constitutes a form of irredentism A further disagreement concerns the amount of area that is to be annexed Usually irredentism is restricted to the attempt to incorporate some parts of another state 7 In this regard irredentism challenges established borders with the neighboring state but does not challenge the existence of the neighboring state in general 14 However some definitions of irredentism also include attempts to absorb the whole neighboring state and not just a part of it In this sense claims by both South Korea and North Korea to incorporate the whole of the Korean Peninsula would be considered a form of irredentism 7 A popular view combining many of the elements listed above holds that irredentism is based on incongruence between the borders of a state and the boundaries of the corresponding nation State borders are usually clearly delimited both physically and on maps National boundaries on the other hand are less tangible since they correspond to a group s perception of its historic cultural and ethnic boundaries 7 Irredentism may manifest if state borders do not correspond to national boundaries It seeks to enlarge a state to establish a congruence between its borders and the boundaries of the corresponding nation 15 16 Types Edit Somalia s occupation of Ethiopian territory constitutes a typical case of irredentism between two states left The desire to create a Kurdistan state composed of Kurds living in Iraq Iran Syria and Turkey is an unusual type of irredentism since there is no pre existing state to absorb the territories right Various types of irredentism have been proposed However not everyone agrees that all the types listed here actually constitute forms of irredentism and it often depends on what definition is used 7 17 18 According to Naomi Chazan and Donald L Horowitz there are two types of irredentism The typical case involves one state that intends to annex territories belonging to a neighboring state Nazi Germany s claim on the Sudetenland of Czechoslovakia is an example of this form of irredentism 4 2 18 For the second type there is no pre existing parent state Instead a cohesive group existing as a minority in multiple countries intends to unify to form a new parent state The intended creation of a Kurdistan state uniting the Kurds living in Turkey Syria Iraq and Iran is an example of the second type If such a project is successful for only one segment the result is secession and not irredentism This happened for example during the breakup of Yugoslavia when Yugoslavian Slovenes formed the new state of Slovenia while the Austrian Slovenes did not join them and remained part of Austria 4 18 Not all theorists accept that the second type actually constitutes a form of irredentism In this regard it is often argued that it is too similar to secession to maintain a distinction between the two For example Benyamin Neuberger holds that a pre existing parent state is necessary for irredentism 4 Thomas Ambrosio restricts his definition to cases involving a pre existing parent state and distinguishes three types of irredentism 1 between two states 2 between a state and a former colony and 3 between a state and a collapsed state The typical case is between two states A classical example of this is Somalia s invasion of Ethiopia 9 19 In the second case of decolonization the territory to be annexed is a former colony of another state and not a regular part of it An example is the Indonesian invasion and occupation of the former Portuguese colony of East Timor 9 20 In the case of state collapse one state disintegrates and a neighboring state absorbs some of its former territories as was the case for the irredentist movements by Croatia and Serbia during the breakup of Yugoslavia 9 21 Explanations EditExplanations of irredentism try to determine what causes irredentism how it unfolds and how it can be peacefully resolved 17 Various hypotheses have been proposed but there is still very little consensus on how irredentism is to be explained despite its prevalence and its long history of provoking armed conflicts 2 22 Some of these proposals can be combined but others conflict with each other and the available evidence may not be sufficient to decide between them 11 An active research topic in this regard concerns the reasons for irredentism Many countries have ethnic kin outside their borders But only few are willing to engage in violent conflicts to annex foreign territory in an attempt to unite their kin Research on the causes of irredentism tries to explain why some countries pursue irredentism but others do not 23 24 Relevant factors often discussed include ethnicity nationalism economic considerations the desire to increase power and the type of regime 4 2 22 Ethnicity and nationalism Edit Hungarian irredentism in the 1930s led Hungary to form an alliance with Nazi Germany 25 26 A common explanation of irredentism focuses on ethnic arguments 4 2 27 It is based on the observation that irredentist claims are primarily advanced by states with a homogenous ethnic population This is explained by the idea that if a state is composed of several different ethnic groups then annexing a territory inhabited primarily by one of those groups would shift the power balance in favor of this group For this reason other groups in the state are likely to internally reject the irredentist claims This inhibiting factor is not present for homogenous states A similar argument is also offered for the enclave to be annexed an ethnically heterogenous enclave is less likely to desire to be absorbed by another state for ethnic reasons since this would only benefit one ethnic group 2 27 These considerations explain for example why irredentism is not very common in Africa since most African states are ethnically heterogeneous 2 Relevant factors for the ethnic motivation for irredentism are how large the dominant ethnic group is relative to other groups how large it is in absolute terms whether it is relatively dispersed or located in a small core area and whether it is politically disadvantaged 24 Explanations focusing on nationalism are closely related to ethnicity based explanations 2 14 Nationalism can be defined as the claim that the boundaries of a state should match those of the nation 28 29 According to constructivist accounts for example the dominant national identity is one of the central factors behind irredentism On this view identities based on ethnicity culture and history can easily invite tendencies to enlarge national borders with the goal of integrating ethnically and culturally similar territories Civic national identities focusing more on a political nature on the other hand are more closely tied to pre existing national boundaries Structural accounts use a slightly different approach and focus on the relation between nationalism and the regional context specifically on the tension between state sovereignty and national self determination 2 State sovereignty is the principle of international law holding that each state has sovereignty over its own territory meaning that states are not allowed to interfere with essentially domestic affairs of other states 30 National self determination on the other hand concerns the right of people to determine their own international political status 31 According to the structural explanation emphasis on national self determination may legitimize irredentist claims while the principle of state sovereignty defends the status quo of the existing sovereign borders This position is supported by the observation that irredentist conflicts are much more common during times of international upheavals 2 Another factor commonly cited as a force fueling irredentism is discrimination against the main ethnic group in the enclave 32 Irredentist states often try to legitimize their aggression against neighbors by presenting them as humanitarian interventions aimed at protecting their discriminated ethnic kin This justification was used for example in Adolf Hitler s irredentist annexation of the Sudetenland in Armenia s intervention in Nagorno Karabakh and in Russia s annexation of Crimea 22 Some theorists like David S Siroky and Christopher W Hale hold that there is little empirical evidence for arguments based on ethnic homogeneity and discrimination On this view they are mainly used as a pretext to hide different goals such as material gain 13 27 33 Another relevant factor is the outlook of the population inhabiting the territory to be annexed The desire of the irredentist state to annex a foreign territory and the desire of that territory to be annexed do not always overlap 34 In some cases a minority group does not want to be annexed as was the case for the Crimean Tatars in Russia s annexation of Crimea 34 35 In other cases a minority group would want to be annexed but the intended parent state is not interested 34 Power and economy Edit Various accounts emphasize the role of power and economic benefits as reasons for irredentism Realist explanations focus on the power balance between the irredentist state and the target state the more this power balance shifts in favor of the irredentist state the more likely violent conflicts become A key factor in this regard is also the reaction of the international community i e whether irredentist claims are tolerated or rejected 2 Irredentism can be used as a tool or pretext to increase the parent state s power 13 33 Rational choice accounts are closely related but focus more on the internal power dynamics within the irredentist state On this view irredentism is a tool used by the elites to secure their political interests They do so by appealing to popular nationalist sentiments This can be used for example to gain public support against political rivals or to divert attention away from domestic problems 2 36 Other explanations focus on economic factors For example larger states enjoy certain advantages that come with having an increased market and decreased per capita cost of defense However there are also certain disadvantages to having a bigger state such as the difficulties that come with accommodating a wider range of citizens preferences 37 38 Based on these lines of thought it has been argued that states are more likely to advocate irredentist claims if the enclave is a relatively rich territory 33 37 Regime type Edit A further relevant factor is the regime type of both the irredentist state and the neighboring state In this regard it is often argued that democratic states are less likely to engage in irredentism One reason cited is that their rule is more inclusive concerning all types of ethnic groups Another is that democracies are in general less likely to engage in violent conflicts This is closely related to democratic peace theory which claims that democracies try to avoid armed conflicts with other democracies This is also supported by the observation that most irredentist conflicts are started by authoritarian regimes 2 32 39 However irredentism constitutes a paradox for democratic systems since democratic ideals pertaining to the ethnic group can often be used to justify its claim which may be interpreted as the expression of a popular will toward unification But there are also cases of irredentism made primarily by a government that are not broadly supported by the population 14 According to David S Siroky and Christopher W Hale anocratic regimes are most likely to engage in irredentist conflicts and to become their victim This is based on the idea that they share certain democratic ideals favoring irredentism but often lack institutional stability and accountability This makes it more likely for the elites to consolidate their power using ethno nationalist appeals to the masses 32 Importance reactions and consequences Edit In the Iran Iraq War 1980 1988 Saddam Hussein s Iraq claimed it had the right to hold sovereignty to the east bank of the Shatt al Arab river held by Iran 40 The war claimed the lives of more than a million people 41 Irredentism is a widespread phenomenon and has been an influential force in world politics since the mid nineteenth century It has been responsible for countless conflicts There are still many unresolved irredentist disputes today that constitute discords between countries 2 14 42 In this regard irredentism is a potential source of conflict in many places and often escalates into military confrontations between states 4 13 16 For example Markus Kornprobst argues that no other issue over which states fight is as war prone as irredentism 42 and Rachel Walker points out that there is scarcely a country in the world that is not involved in some sort of irredentist quarrel although few would admit to this 14 Stephen M Saideman and R William Ayres argue that many of the most important conflicts of the 1990s were caused by irredentism such as the wars for a Greater Serbia and a Greater Croatia 24 Irredentism carries a lot of potential for future conflicts since many countries have kin groups in adjacent countries It has been argued that it poses a significant danger to human security and the international order 23 For these reasons irredentism has been a central topic in the field of international relations 2 For the most part international law is hostile to irredentism For example the United Nations Charter calls for respect for established territorial borders and defends state sovereignty Similar outlooks are taken by the Organization of African Unity the Organization of American States and the Helsinki Final Act 13 Since irredentist claims are based on conflicting sovereignty assertions it is often difficult to find a working compromise 14 Peaceful resolutions of irredentist conflicts often result in mutual recognition of de facto borders rather than territorial change 15 Martin Griffiths et al argue that the threat of rising irredentism may be reduced by focusing on political pluralism and respect for minority rights 13 Irredentist movements peaceful or violent are rarely successful 13 In many cases despite aiming to help ethnic minorities irredentism often has the opposite effect and ends up worsening their living conditions On the one hand the state still in control of those territories may decide to further discriminate against them as an attempt to decrease the threat to its national security On the other hand the irredentist state may merely claim to care about the ethnic minorities but in truth use such claims only as a pretext to increase its territory or to destabilize an opponent 13 33 History EditMain article List of irredentist claims or disputes The emergence of irredentism is tied to the rise of modern nationalism and the idea of a nation state which are often linked to the French Revolution 5 4 However some theorists like Griffiths et al argue that phenomena similar to irredentism existed even before For example part of the justification of the crusades was to liberate fellow Christians from Muslim rule and to redeem the Holy Land Nonetheless most theorists see irredentism as a more recent phenomenon associated with border disputes between modern states 13 The term originally referred to an Italian movement after 1878 demanding that certain predominantly Italian speaking areas in Switzerland and the Austro Hungarian Empire should become part of Italy 2 43 The partition of Czechoslovakia from 1938 through 1939 The dark purple area shows the Sudetenland annexed by Nazi Germany Nazi Germany s annexation of the Sudetenland in 1938 is an often cited example of irredentism At the time the Sudetenland formed part of Czechoslovakia but had a majority German population Adolf Hitler justified the annexation based on his allegation that Sudeten Germans were being mistreated by the Czech government The Sudetenland was yielded to Germany following the Munich Agreement in an attempt to prevent the outbreak of a major war 17 44 45 Somalia s invasion of Ethiopia in 1977 is frequently discussed as a case of African irredentism The goal of this attack was to unite the significant Somali population living in the Ogaden region with their kin by annexing this area to create a Greater Somalia The invasion escalated into a major war of attrition that lasted about eight months Somalia was close to reaching its goal but failed in the end mainly due to a massive intervention by socialist countries 19 46 47 The Falkland Islands are controlled by the United Kingdom but claimed by Argentina Argentina s invasion of the Falkland Islands is often cited as an example of irredentism in South America In 1982 Argentina tried to seize the Falkland Islands They were under British control since 1833 but Argentina s claims on them date back before that Britain managed to decide the conflict in its favor and remained in control due to its superior military force and strong international support Despite its defeat Argentina has upheld its claim on the Falkland Islands to this day 2 48 49 The breakup of Yugoslavia in the early 1990s resulted in various irredentist projects They include Slobodan Milosevic s attempts to establish a Greater Serbia by absorbing various regions of neighboring states that were part of former Yugoslavia A simultaneous similar project aimed at the establishment of a Greater Croatia 9 21 Regions of Ukraine annexed by Russia since 2014 Crimea and 2022 Donetsk Kherson Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia with a red line marking the area of actual control by Russia on 30 September 2022 Russia s annexation of Crimea in 2014 is a more recent example of irredentism It was justified based on the allegation that the Ukrainian government did not uphold the rights of ethnic Russians inhabiting Crimea 23 50 51 However it has been claimed that this was only a pretext to increase its territory and power 23 Other frequently discussed cases of irredentism include disputes between Pakistan and India over Jammu and Kashmir as well as China s claims on Taiwan 52 53 Related concepts EditEthnicity Edit Ethnicity plays a central role in irredentism since most irredentist states justify their expansionist agenda based on shared ethnicity In this regard the goal of unifying different parts of an ethnic group in a common nation state is used as a justification for annexing foreign territories and going to war if the neighboring state resists 5 6 2 Ethnicity is a grouping of people according to a set of shared attributes and similarities It divides people into different groups based on attributes like physical features customs tradition historical background language culture religion and values 54 55 56 Not all these factors are equally relevant for every ethnic group For some groups one factor may predominate as in ethno linguistic ethno racial and ethno religious identities In most cases ethnic identities are based on several common features 57 58 A central aspect of many ethnic identities is that all members share a common homeland or place of origin This place of origin does not have to correspond to the area where the majority of the ethnic group currently lives in case they migrated from their homeland Another feature is a common language or dialect In many cases religion also forms a vital aspect of ethnicity Shared culture is another significant factor It is a wide term and can include characteristic social institutions diet dress and other practices It is often difficult to draw clear boundaries between people based on their ethnicity 56 For this reason some definitions focus less on actual objective features and emphasize instead that what unites an ethnic group is a subjective belief that such common features exist On this view the common belief matters more than the extent to which those shared features actually exist 56 57 Examples of large ethnic groups are the Han Chinese the Arabs the Bengalis the Punjabis and the Turks 56 59 Some theorists like John Milton Yinger use terms like ethnic group or ethnicity as near synonyms for nation 60 Nations are usually based on ethnicity But what distinguishes them from ethnicity is their political form as a state or a state like entity The physical and visible aspects of ethnicity such as skin color and facial features are often referred to as race which may thus be understood as a subset of ethnicity 56 However some theorists like Pierre van den Berghe contrast the two by restricting ethnicity to cultural traits and race to physical traits 57 Ethnic solidarity can provide a sense of belonging as well as physical and psychological security It can help individuals identify with a common purpose 56 However ethnicity has also been the source of many conflicts It has been responsible for various forms of mass violence including ethnic cleansing and genocide The perpetrators usually form part of the ruling majority and target ethnic minority groups 56 61 Not all ethnic based conflicts involve mass violence like many forms of ethnic discrimination 56 The term ethnicity originates in the Ancient Greek term ethnos meaning peoples 61 Nationalism and nation state Edit Main articles Nationalism and Nation state Irredentism is often understood as a product of modern nationalism i e the claim that a nation should have its own sovereign state 5 4 In this regard irredentism emerged with and depends on the modern idea of nation states 14 The start of modern nationalism is often associated with the French Revolution in 1789 This spawned various nationalist revolutions in Europe around the mid nineteenth century They often resulted in a replacement of dynastic imperial governments 4 A central aspect of nationalism is that it sees states as entities with clearly delimited borders that should correspond to national boundaries 14 15 Irredentism reflects the importance people ascribe to these borders and how exactly they are drawn One difficulty in this regard is that the exact boundaries are often difficult to justify and are therefore challenged in favor of alternatives Irredentism manifests some of the most aggressive aspects of modern nationalism 13 It can be seen as a side effect of nationalism paired with the importance it ascribes to borders and the difficulties in agreeing on them 14 62 Secession Edit Main article Secession Changes in national boundaries after the end of the Cold War and the dissolution of the Soviet Union and breakup of Yugoslavia Irredentism is closely related to secession 2 24 63 Secession can be defined as an attempt by an ethnic group claiming a homeland to withdraw with its territory from the authority of a larger state of which it is a part 63 Irredentism by contrast is initiated by members of an ethnic group in one state to incorporate territories across their border housing ethnically kindred people 63 Secession happens when a part of an existing state breaks away to form an independent entity In the case of irredentism the break away area does not become independent but merges into another entity 13 2 14 Irredentism is often seen as a government decision unlike secession 23 Both movements are influential phenomena in contemporary politics but as Horowitz argues secession movements are much more frequent in postcolonial states However he also holds that secession movements are less likely to succeed since they usually have very few military resources compared to irredentist states For this reason they normally require prolonged external assistance often from another state 64 However such state policies are subject to change For example the Indian government supported the Sri Lankan Tamil secessionists until 1987 but then reach an agreement with the Sri Lankan government and helped suppress the movement 65 66 67 Horowitz holds that it is important to distinguish secessionist and irredentist movements since they differ significantly concerning their motivation context and goals 64 Despite these differences irredentism and secessionism are closely related nonetheless 2 24 In some cases the two tendencies may exist side by side It is also possible that the advocates of one movement change their outlook and promote the other Whether a movement favors irredentism or secessionism is determined among other things by the prospects of forming an independent state in contrast to joining another state 68 A further factor is whether the irredentist state is likely to espouse a similar ideology to the one found in the territory intending to break away The anticipated reaction of the international community is an additional factor i e whether it would embrace tolerate or reject the detachment or the absorption by another state 69 Revanchism Edit Irredentism and Revanchism are two closely related phenomena since both involve the attempt to annex territory belonging to another state 70 71 72 But they differ concerning the motivation fuelling this attempt Irredentism has a positive goal of building a greater state that fulfills the ideals of a nation state to unify people claimed to belong together because of their shared national identity based on ethnic cultural and historical aspects 4 14 70 For revanchism on the other hand the goal is more negative and focuses on taking revenge for some form of grievance or injustice suffered earlier 70 73 74 In this regard it is motivated by resentment and aims to reverse territorial losses due to a previous defeat In an attempt to distinguish irredentism from revanchism Anna M Wittmann argues that Germany s annexation of the Sudetenland in 1938 constitutes a form of irredentism because of its emphasis on a shared language and ethnicity But she characterizes Germany s invasion of Poland the following year as a form of revanchism due to its justification as a revenge intended to reverse previous territorial losses 70 The term revanchism comes from the French term revanche meaning revenge 70 72 It was originally used in the aftermath of the Franco Prussian War for nationalists intending to reclaim the lost territory of Alsace Lorraine 70 Saddam Hussein justified the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990 by claiming that Kuwait had always been an integral part of Iraq and only became an independent nation due to the interference of the British Empire 75 See also EditEthnic nationalism Ethnic identity based political ideology Expansionism Consists of policies of states that involve territorial or economic expansion Lebensraum German living space ideas of settler colonialism 1890s 1940s Separatism Advocacy for separation from a larger group Secession Act of withdrawing from an organization union military alliance or especially a political entity Manifest destiny Cultural belief of 19th century American expansionists Pan nationalism Nationalism beyond national boundaries Phyletism Conflation between church and nation Rump state Remnant of a once larger state left with a reduced territory Status quo ante bellum Latin phrase meaning the state existing before the war Territorial dispute Disagreement over the possession or control of land between countries or their subdivisionsReferences Edit a b Barrett Cyril 18 January 2018 irredentism A Concise Oxford Dictionary of Politics and International Relations Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199670840 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Ambrosio Thomas 7 September 2011 irredentism In Badie Bertrand Berg Schlosser Dirk Morlino Leonardo eds International Encyclopedia of Political Science SAGE Publications pp 1346 8 ISBN 9781452266497 Stibbe Matthew Italian Irredentism 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Retrieved 15 December 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o White amp Millett 2019 p 420 a b c d e Lagasse Paul Goldman Lora Hobson Archie Norton Susan R eds 2020 Irredentism Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia 6th Edition EBSCO Columbia University Press ISBN 9780787650155 a b c White amp Millett 2019 p 419 a b c d e f g h i j k l Kornprobst 2008 p 8 10 White amp Millett 2019 p 421 a b c d e White amp Millett 2019 p 420 1 a b Horowitz 2011 p 160 a b c Siroky amp Hale 2017 p 2 a b White amp Millett 2019 p 419 20 a b c d e f g h i j k Griffiths Martin O Callaghan Terry Roach Steven C 2008 International Relations The Key Concepts Taylor amp Francis pp 175 7 ISBN 9780415774369 a b c d e f g h i j k Clarke Paul Barry Foweraker Joe 16 December 2003 Encyclopedia of Democratic Thought Routledge pp 375 6 ISBN 9781136908569 a b c Kornprobst 2008 p 7 8 a b Hinnebusch Professor of International Relations and Middle Politics Raymond 2002 The Foreign Policies of Middle East States Lynne Rienner Publishers pp 7 8 ISBN 9781588260208 a b c Ambrosio Thomas irredentism www britannica com Retrieved 29 November 2022 a b c Horowitz 2011 p 159 a b Ackermann et al 2008a p 143 Ackermann et al 2008a p 130 a b Ackermann et al 2008a p 49 468 71 a b c Siroky amp Hale 2017 p 8 9 a b c d e Siroky amp Hale 2017 p 1 a b c d e Saideman Stephen M Ayres R William 2000 Determining the Causes of Irredentism Logit Analyses of Minorities at Risk Data from the 1980s and 1990s The Journal of Politics 62 4 1126 1144 doi 10 1111 0022 3816 00049 ISSN 0022 3816 JSTOR 2647868 S2CID 144804873 Hames Peter 2004 The Cinema of Central Europe Wallflower Press p 36 ISBN 978 1 904764 20 5 Hanebrink Paul 5 September 2018 In Defense of Christian Hungary Religion Nationalism and Antisemitism 1890 1944 Cornell University Press p 140 ISBN 978 1 5017 2726 9 a b c Siroky amp Hale 2017 p 2 3 Hechter Michael 2000 Containing Nationalism Oxford University Press p 7 ISBN 9780198297420 Gellner Ernest 2008 Nations and Nationalism Cornell University Press p 1 ISBN 9780801475009 Charter of the United Nations 1945 Self determination international law LII Legal Information Institute Retrieved 4 December 2022 a b c Siroky amp Hale 2017 p 3 a b c d Orabator S E 1981 Irredentism as a Pretext The Western Sahara Case Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria 11 1 2 166 181 ISSN 0018 2540 JSTOR 41857111 a b c Siroky amp Hale 2017 p 1 2 Walker Shaun 25 September 2022 A way to get rid of us Crimean Tatars decry Russia s mobilisation the Guardian Retrieved 5 December 2022 Siroky amp Hale 2017 p 4 a b Siroky amp Hale 2017 p 1 3 Bain Joe S Economies of Scale In Darity William A ed International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences Macmillan Reference USA ISBN 9780028659657 Reiter Dan Democratic Peace Theory Oxford Bibliographies Oxford University Press Retrieved 23 December 2022 Erik Goldstein Erik Dr Wars and Peace Treaties 1816 to 1991 P133 Hussain Murtaza 9 March 2023 The War in Ukraine Is Just Getting Started The Intercept a b Kornprobst 2008 p 11 Gilman D C Peck H T Colby F M eds 1905 Irredentism New International Encyclopedia 1st ed New York Dodd Mead Knowles Elizabeth 1 January 2006 Sudetenland The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198609810 Ackermann et al 2008 p xxvi 20 Christie Kenneth 1998 Ethnic Conflict Tribal Politics A Global Perspective Psychology Press p 139 ISBN 9780700711185 Tareke Gebru 2000 The Ethiopia Somalia War of 1977 Revisited The International Journal of African Historical Studies 33 3 635 667 doi 10 2307 3097438 ISSN 0361 7882 JSTOR 3097438 Beck P J 1 April 2006 The Falklands War The English Historical Review CXXI 491 648 649 doi 10 1093 ehr cel096 Ackermann et al 2008a p xxvi 147 8 Navarro Armando 8 January 2015 Mexicano and Latino Politics and the Quest for Self Determination What Needs to Be Done Lexington Books p 536 ISBN 9780739197363 Batta Anna 24 December 2021 The Russian Minorities in the Former Soviet Republics Secession Integration and Homeland Routledge p 2020 ISBN 9781000485578 Kornprobst 2008 p 4 7 8 Harding Harry 1988 China and Northeast Asia The Political Dimension University Press of America p 59 ISBN 9780819165923 Chandra Kanchan 25 October 2012 Constructivist Theories of Ethnic Politics Oxford University Press pp 64 69 70 ISBN 9780199893157 Richardson Bouie Deborale 2003 Ethnic Variation Ethnicity In Ponzetti James J ed International Encyclopedia of Marriage and Family Macmillan Reference USA ISBN 9780028656724 a b c d e f g h Law Ian Ethnicity In Darity William A ed International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences Macmillan Reference USA ISBN 9780028659657 a b c Alba Richard D 1992 Ethnicity In Borgatta Edgar F Borgatta Marie L eds Encyclopedia of Sociology Macmillan ISBN 9780028970516 Taras Raymond Ganguly Rajat 7 August 2015 1 Ethnic Conflict on the World Stage Definitions Understanding Ethnic Conflict Routledge ISBN 9781317342823 Radstone Susannah Wilson Rita 6 September 2020 Translating Worlds Migration Memory and Culture Routledge ISBN 9780429655999 Yinger John Milton 1 January 1994 Ethnicity Source of Strength Source of Conflict SUNY Press p 11 ISBN 9780791417973 a b Sherrer Christian P 2005 Shelton Dinah ed Encyclopedia of Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity Macmillan Reference ISBN 9780028658506 Kornprobst 2008 p 10 1 a b c Horowitz 2011 p 158 a b Horowitz 2011 p 159 60 Horowitz 2011 p 162 Senaratne Kalana 2021 Sri Lanka A Case Study Internal Self Determination in International Law History Theory and Practice Cambridge University Press pp 155 194 ISBN 9781108484404 Ackermann et al 2008a p 403 4 Horowitz 2011 p 160 1 Horowitz 2011 p 161 2 a b c d e f Wittmann Anna M 5 December 2016 Talking Conflict The Loaded Language of Genocide Political Violence Terrorism and Warfare ABC CLIO pp 301 2 ISBN 9781440834257 Burnett M Troy 4 August 2020 Nationalism Today Extreme Political Movements around the World 2 volumes ABC CLIO p xvii ISBN 9781440850004 a b Nolan Cathal J 2002 The Greenwood Encyclopedia of International Relations M R Greenwood Publishing Group p 1400 ISBN 9780313323829 Margalit Avishai 12 October 2009 On Compromise and Rotten Compromises Princeton University Press p 69 ISBN 9781400831210 Ghervas Stella 30 March 2021 Conquering Peace From the Enlightenment to the European Union Harvard University Press p 151 ISBN 9780674259089 R Stephen Humphreys Between Memory and Desire The Middle East in a Troubled Age University of California Press 1999 p 105 Sources Edit Ackermann Marsha E Schroeder Michael J Terry Janice J Upshur Jiu Hwa Lo Whitters Mark F eds 2008 Encyclopedia of world history Volume 5 New York Facts on File ISBN 9780816063864 Ackermann Marsha E Schroeder Michael J Terry Janice J Upshur Jiu Hwa Lo Whitters Mark F eds 2008a Encyclopedia of world history Volume 6 New York Facts on File ISBN 9780816063864 Horowitz Donald L 2011 13 Irredentas and secessions adjacent phenomena neglected connections In Cordell Karl Wolff Stefan eds Routledge handbook of ethnic conflict London Routledge pp 158 68 ISBN 978 0203845493 Kornprobst Markus 18 December 2008 Irredentism in European Politics Argumentation Compromise and Norms Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521895583 Siroky David S Hale Christopher W January 2017 Inside Irredentism A Global Empirical Analysis Inside Irredentism American Journal of Political Science 61 1 117 128 doi 10 1111 ajps 12271 White W George Millett Bruce 29 November 2019 Kobayashi Audrey ed International Encyclopedia of Human Geography Elsevier pp 419 26 ISBN 9780081022962 External links Edit Look up irredentism in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Irredentism Irredentism New International Encyclopedia 1905 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Irredentists Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 14 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 840 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Irredentism amp oldid 1152512392, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.