List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Notes on Contributors
Introduction: Identity Matters
Patricia M. Thornton
Chapter 1. Ethnic Conflict and Civic
Nationalism: A Model
David Brown
Chapter 2. Social Identity Matters: Predicting
Prejudice and Violence in Western Europe
Thomas F. Pettigrew
Chapter 3. Readiness to Fight in Crimea: How It
Interrelates with National and Ethnic Identities
Karina V. Korostelina
Chapter 4. Ethnic Identities of the Karen
Peoples in Burma and Thailand
Kwanchewan Buadaeng
Chapter 5. European Attitudes toward
Immigrants
Thomas F. Pettigrew
Chapter 6. Tibetan Identity in Today’s
China
Badeng Nima
Chapter 7. Cross-Cutting Identities in
Singapore: Crabgrass on the Padang
James L. Peacock and Wee Teng Soh
Chapter 8. The Casamance Separatist Conflict:
From Identity to the Trap of “Identitism”
Hamadou Tidiane Sy
Chapter 9. Manufacturing Sectarian Divides: The
Chinese State, Identities, and Collective Violence
Patricia M. Thornton
Chapter 10. Islam and the West: A Perspective
from Pakistan
Mohammad Waseem
Conclusion: Ethnic and Sectarian as Ideal
Types
Patrick B. Inman and James L. Peacock
Index
James L. Peacock is Kenan Professor of Anthropology and Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the 2002 recipient of the American Anthropological Association’s Boas Award. His publications include: Grounded Globalism (University of Georgia Press, 2007), Pilgrims of Paradox (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1989), The Anthropological Lens (Cambridge University Press, 1986, 2001), and Rites of Modernization (University of Chicago Press, 1968, 1987).
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