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  1. Breaking up: An Essay on Secession.David Gauthier - 1994 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 24 (3):357 - 371.
    Current discussion of the normative issues surrounding secession is both helped and hindered by the existence of but one philosophic treatment of these issues sufficiently systematic and comprehensive to qualify as a theory of secession - Allen Buchanan’s. He provides the unique focal point, and so simplifies the task of those who seek to begin from the present state of the art. But in providing the unique focal point, Buchanan complicates the task of those who view, or think they view, (...)
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  • Peoples and Secession.R. E. Ewin - 1994 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 11 (2):225-231.
    Kai Nielson (Secession: The Case of Quebec), as did Allen Buchanan in Secession, discusses secession on an analogy with no-fault divorce. Both these writers fail to distinguish between what it is to be a person and what it is to be a people, where peoples are the items that secede. The issue of what constitutes a people is thus crucial to the theory of secession (for similar reasons to those that made it crucial to seventeenth century debate about the right (...)
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  • Toward a theory of secession.Allen Buchanan - 1991 - Ethics 101 (2):322-342.
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  • Secession: The Case of Quebec.Kai Nielsen - 1993 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 10 (1):29-43.
    ABSTRACT I argue that people have a right to self‐determination when they are plainly predominant in a certain territory and do not violate the civil liberties of minorities. But there is no self‐determination without the preservation of self‐identity and the cultural preservation that goes with its secure existence. So to preserve autonomy and self‐determination people must preserve their cultural identity and this cannot be securely sustained in modern conditions without a nation‐state concerned to nourish that identity. Such considerations support a (...)
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  • (1 other version)Introduction: Questioning the ethnic/civic dichotomy.Michel Seymour, Jocelyne Couture & Kai Nielsen - 1996 - Rethinking Nationalism 22:1-61.
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  • Self‐Determination: Politics, Philosophy, and Law.Donald L. Horowitz - 1998 - In Margaret Moore (ed.), National Self-Determination and Secession. Oxford University Press.
    This chapter examines the empirical complexities of territorially based ethnic separation against the growing philosophical justifications for self‐determination. Horowitz argues that ‘clean breaks’ are not likely, not least because ethnicity itself is a contextual and therefore mutable affiliation, and argues that more attention should be paid to encourage domestic measures of interethnic accommodation.
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