1990
DOI: 10.1080/01419870.1990.9993667
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A resynthesis of the primordial and circumstantial approaches to ethnic group solidarity: Towards an explanatory model

Abstract: To cite this article: George M. Scott (1990) A resynthesis of the primordial and circumstantial approaches to ethnic group solidarity: Towards an explanatory model, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 13:2, 147-171, AbstractSocial scientists who have attempted to explain ethnic group solidarity have tended to use either the primordial or the circumstantial approach. The first approach accounts for strong ethnic attachments on the basis of their ineffable affective significance. Moreover, this affective significance mo… Show more

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Cited by 82 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…Laitin (1998) argues that culture is "Janusfaced," with both a constraining primordial element and a manipulable, flexible, constructed element, an argument elaborated by Fearon (1999). Scott (1990) sees identities as primordial but their relative importance as constructed. Nagata (1981) avers that circumstantial factors determine how and why certain aspects of shared culture are "primordialized" such that people come to accept them as primordial for the purposes of defining who is a group member.…”
Section: Theories Of Groups and Groups Of Theoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Laitin (1998) argues that culture is "Janusfaced," with both a constraining primordial element and a manipulable, flexible, constructed element, an argument elaborated by Fearon (1999). Scott (1990) sees identities as primordial but their relative importance as constructed. Nagata (1981) avers that circumstantial factors determine how and why certain aspects of shared culture are "primordialized" such that people come to accept them as primordial for the purposes of defining who is a group member.…”
Section: Theories Of Groups and Groups Of Theoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first ambivalence is that both actors vying for cultural recognition and those pursuing political or economic interest are usually involved in the same ethnic movement (McKay, 1982;Scott, 1990;Eller & Coughlan, 1993;Smith, 1998;Gil-White, 1999;Webb, 2013). Considering the Islamic revival in developed countries, Immigrants who were not initially very religious come to realize their need for Islam as a support system when they suffer from job discrimination, unemployment, and low academic achievement (Keaton, 2006).…”
Section: The Problems Of Primordialism and Instrumentalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3 Despite the expansiveness of the literature, most scholars agree on some fundamental characteristics of ethnicity: First, they agree on its description (Gil-White 1999; Scott 1990). An ethnic category is frequently defined as an aggregation of individuals sharing the perception of a common origin based on a set of shared attributes such as language, culture, history, locality, and/or physical appearance (e.g.…”
Section: Disaggregating the Term "Ethnicity"mentioning
confidence: 99%