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  1. Traditional beneficiaries: trade bans, exemptions, and morality embodied in diets.Kristie O’Neill - 2018 - Agriculture and Human Values 35 (2):515-527.
    Research on the nutrition transition often treats dietary changes as an outcome of increased trade and urban living. The Northern Food Crisis presents a puzzle since it involves hunger and changing diets, but coincides with a European ban on trade in seal products. I look to insights from economic sociology and decolonizing scholarship to make sense of the ban on seal products and its impacts. I examine how trade arrangements enact power imbalances in ways that are not always obvious. I (...)
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  • Europe in Africa and Africa in Europe: Rethinking postcolonial space, cultural encounters and hybridity. [REVIEW]José Lingna Nafafé - 2013 - European Journal of Social Theory 16 (1):51-68.
    European encounters fostered in the early modern period with West Africa have provided us with interesting frameworks from which to engage in the construction of difference, race within Western European space and with terms for rethinking European identity that transcend the cosmopolitan and colonial pretensions. Drawing on early historical records, especically the Portuguese experience in West Africa, this article seeks to contest standard historical sociological tropes of European identity. First, creolization and hybridity are to challenge the essentialism which has been (...)
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  • Collective Identity as Shared Ethical Self-Understanding: The Case of the Emerging European Identity.Cathleen Kantner - 2006 - European Journal of Social Theory 9 (4):501-523.
    Against the common view that a European identity is a functional precondition for legitimate EU governance, this article argues that conceptual weaknesses of the term ‘collective identity’ have led to a confusion of several analytic dimensions of ‘identity’ and to an overestimation of strong forms of collective identity. Insights provided by analytic philosophy will be introduced in order to redefine and differentiate ‘collective identity’. The ways in which people refer to themselves as members of we-groups will be outlined and illustrated (...)
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  • (1 other version)The Making of a Post-western Europe: a Civilizational Analysis.Gerard Delanty - 2002 - Thesis Eleven 72 (1):8-25.
    The enlargement of the European Union to include eventually Turkey and the former communist countries is a major challenge for our understanding of the meaning of Europe as a geopolitical, social and cultural space. It is also a question of the identity of Europe as one shaped by social or systemic integration. With the diminishing significance of national borders within the EU, the outer territorial frontier is also losing its significance and Europe will become more and more postwestern. It thus (...)
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  • (1 other version)The Making of a Postwestern Europe: A Civilizational Analysis.Gerard Delanty - 2003 - Thesis Eleven 72 (1):8-25.
    The enlargement of the European Union to include eventually Turkey and the former communist countries is a major challenge for our understanding of the meaning of Europe as a geopolitical, social and cultural space. It is also a question of the identity of Europe as one shaped by social or systemic integration. With the diminishing significance of national borders within the EU, the outer territorial frontier is also losing its significance and Europe will become more and more postwestern. It thus (...)
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  • Europe and whiteness: Challenges to European identity and European citizenship in light of Brexit and the ‘refugees/migrants crisis’.Francesca Romana Ammaturo - 2019 - European Journal of Social Theory 22 (4):548-566.
    This article uses the current ‘refugees/migrants crisis’ and Brexit as illustrative of the numerous challenges the European Union faces today when it comes to its identity and the construction of a ‘European citizenship’. By discussing the proliferation of borders on the European continent and by analysing the sociological significance of such proliferation, the article argues that Europe is experiencing an ontological and epistemological rather than an existential crisis that relates to its incapacity to acknowledge, and critically engage with, its fundamental (...)
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