1st Edition

Independence Movements in Subnational Island Jurisdictions

Edited By Eve Hepburn, Godfrey Baldacchino Copyright 2013
    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    The dynamics for any moves for political independence in the 21st century are very different from those of the 20th. The aspirations of former colonies to independence are grinding to a halt; the rationale for selfdetermination is increasingly driven by strategic and pragmatic economic arguments, and not so much by nationalist appeals. Meanwhile, creative governance, fiscal vicissitudes and membership of supra-national bodies have ushered in examples of ‘sovereign states’ that approximate suzerain entities. Are independence movements active today aspiring to a different kind of sovereignty from their 20th century predecessors, one that secures autonomy at home, but which maintains a special relationship with a larger, richer, country? This collection critically reviews the origins, policies and aspirations of independence movements from the world’s subnational island jurisdictions, where a distinct and separate geography tends to facilitate the emergence of an equally distinct political and cultural identity. These island territories are the world’s top candidates for achieving sovereign status. And yet various factors are preventing them from making the final push towards independence.

    This book was originally published as a special issue of Commonwealth and Comparative Politics

    1. Introduction  2. The long-term propensity for political affiliation in island microstates  3. Independence movements in the Caribbean: withering on the vine?  4. The experience of sovereignty in the Pacific: island states and political autonomy in the twenty-first century  5. Evolving approaches to sovereignty in the French Pacific  6. The Western Mediterranean islands and the many faces of independentism  7. Autonomy development, irredentism and secessionism in a Nordic context  8. The impact of the Scottish independence referendum on ethnoregionalist movements in the British Isles  9. From the wings to the footlights: the international relations of Europe’s smallest states  10. A different appetite for sovereignty? Independence movements in subnational island jurisdictions

    Biography

    Eve Hepburn (PhD, European University Institute, Florence) is Deputy Director of the Academy of Government and Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations, University of Edinburgh, Scotland, U. K.; Co-Editor of the Journal of Regional & Federal Studies; and Co-Convenor of the European Consortium for Political Research Standing Group on Federalism and Regionalism.

    Godfrey Baldacchino (PhD, Warwick, UK) is Canada Research Chair (Island Studies) at the University of Prince Edward Island, Canada; Visiting Professor of Sociology at the University of Malta, Malta; Executive Editor, Island Studies Journal; and Vice-President, International Small Islands Studies Association.