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Postnationalism
Postnationalism
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Postnationalism or non-nationalism[1] is the process or trend by which nation states and national identities lose their importance relative to cross-national, self-organized, or supranational and global entities as well as local entities.[2] Although postnationalism is not strictly considered the antonym of nationalism, the two terms and their associated assumptions are antithetic as postnationalism is an internationalistic process. There are several factors that contribute to aspects of postnationalism, including economic, political, and cultural elements. The increasing globalization of economic factors, such as the expansion of international trade in raw materials, manufactured goods, and services, and the growing importance of multinational corporations and internationalization of financial markets, have led to a shift in emphasis from national economies to global ones.

At the same time, socio-political power is partially transferred from national authorities to supernational entities, such as multinational corporations, the United Nations, the European Union, the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and NATO. Furthermore, media and entertainment industries are becoming increasingly global, thereby facilitating the formation of trends and opinions on a supranational scale. The migration of individuals or groups between countries contributes to the formation of postnational identities and beliefs. However, attachment to citizenship and national identities often remains important.[3][4][5]

Postnationalism and human rights

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In the scholarly literature,[which?] postnationalism is linked to the expansion of international human rights law and norms. International human rights norms are reflected in a growing stress on the rights of individuals in terms of their "personhood," not just their citizenship. International human rights law does not recognize the right of entry to any state by non-citizens, but demands that individuals should be judged increasingly on universal criteria not particularistic criteria (such as blood descent in ethnicity, or favoring a particular sex). This has impacted citizenship and immigration law, especially in western countries. The German parliament, for example, has felt pressure to, and has diluted (if not eradicated), citizenship based on ethnic descent,[citation needed] which had caused German-born Turks, for example, to be excluded from German citizenship.[citation needed] Scholars identified with this argument include Yasemin Soysal, David Jacobson, and Saskia Sassen.[6]

In the European Union

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European integration has created a system of supranational entities and is often discussed in relationship to the concept of postnationalism.[7][8][9]

In Canada

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In June 2000, Liberal Prime Minister Jean Chrétien described Canada as a post-national state in a speech.[10] During the 2011 election, John Ibbitson argued that in the fading issues of the "Laurentian Consensus" were responsible for turning Canada into the first post-national state.[11] In 2015, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, while defining Canadian values, suggested his country could be considered the world’s first post-national state.[12][13]

Writing in Macleans in 2018, Scott Gilmore felt like Canada moved past the national stage when talking about post nationalism.[14] In opposition to the perceived shift toward post-nationalism in Canada, John Weissenberger writing in the National Post has argued that it is the Laurentian elite themselves who have "diluted the 'Laurentian' nature of the class and boosted their disdain for national character."[15] In 2024, Max Fawcett writing in Canada's National Obsever defended post nationalism against critics and has suggested that Justin Trudeau's comments was trying to build on the work of his father Pierre Elliot Trudeau.[16]

In the media

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Catherine Frost, professor of political science at McMaster University, argues that while the Internet and online social relations forge social and political bonds across national borders, they do not have "the commitment or cohesiveness needed to underpin a demanding new mode of social and political relations".[17] Nonetheless, it has been argued the increasing options of obtaining virtual citizenship from established nations (e.g., E-Residency of Estonia) and micronations[18] can be seen as examples of what citizenship might look like in a post-national world.[19]

In sports

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Postnational trends have been evident in professional sports. Simon Kuper called the 2008 European soccer championship (UEFA Euro 2008) "the first postnational" European Championship.[20] He argues that during the tournament both for players and fans sportsmanship and enjoyment of the event were more important than national rivalries or even winning.

See also

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References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Postnationalism is a theoretical perspective in political and that critiques the nation-state as the primary locus of identity, , and , proposing instead that global interconnectedness, migration, and supranational entities foster transnational or cosmopolitan forms of membership based on universal rather than national belonging. Emerging amid late-20th-century , it posits a blurring of borders and a shift from territorially bounded sovereignty to shared regional or global frameworks, though it coexists with rather than supplants nationalism. Key proponents, including Yasemin Soysal and , argue for "" and decoupled from nationality, exemplified by mechanisms that extend protections beyond state borders. However, for widespread postnational of state remains inconclusive, with studies highlighting persistent national frameworks for migrant and the variable of supranational regimes. Critics contend that postnationalism overlooks causal drivers of social cohesion, such as shared cultural and historical ties, and has faltered amid economic fragmentation, resurgent nationalisms like and populist in , and failures to deliver accountable . These tensions underscore controversies over whether postnational ideals advance or undermine democratic legitimacy and , often amplified by institutional biases favoring abstract over grounded national realities.

Definition and Core Concepts

Definition

Postnationalism refers to the theoretical and sociological framework positing a decline in the of nation-states and national identities amid , transnational migration, and supranational institutions, wherein political membership, , and loyalties increasingly transcend territorial borders. This emerged as a response to empirical trends such as cross-border economic integration and demographic shifts, where traditional national citizenship models—tied to ethnic or territorial exclusivity—are challenged by pluralistic, hybrid forms of belonging. Unlike outright abolition of the nation-state, postnationalism acknowledges coexistence with , integrating national elements into broader global perspectives rather than supplanting them entirely. Central to postnationalism is the reconfiguration of beyond the nation-state hybrid, emphasizing universal , cosmopolitan , and denationalized legal statuses applicable to non-citizens, such as long-term residents or migrants. Scholars describe this as a transformation in political , where derive from global norms or regional bodies rather than alone, evidenced by frameworks like the extending protections irrespective of . under postnationalism prioritizes multiple, overlapping affiliations—regional, cultural, or planetary—over singular national , reflecting causal drivers like labor mobility and digital connectivity that bordered exclusivity. Critically, postnationalism remains a contested construct, with indicating persistent national in areas like defense, taxation, and welfare distribution, suggesting it functions more as an aspirational or analytical lens than a realized . Proponents argue it addresses globalization's realities, such as the 281 million international migrants recorded by the in , who embody deterritorialized ties, yet detractors highlight risks of diluted and cultural fragmentation without robust supranational . This duality underscores postnationalism's role in debating membership amid interdependence, without presupposing nationalism's obsolescence. Postnationalism is distinguished from primarily by its emphasis on the or transcendence of national structures and identities, rather than merely facilitating cross-border connections that coexist with nation-states. focuses on migrants' and ' sustained ties, practices, and identities spanning multiple , such as remittances, dual loyalties, or cultural , without inherently rejecting the nation-state as the core unit of political and . In contrast, postnationalism views these transnational flows as symptomatic of a broader reconfiguration where national yields to regional or global frameworks, potentially rendering traditional and borders obsolete. For instance, while might describe Mexican immigrants maintaining economic links to both the United States and Mexico under NAFTA, postnationalism interprets such dynamics as integrating national economies into hemispheric systems that dilute unilateral state control. Unlike , which posits a normative of universal , , and moral obligations transcending all particular affiliations, postnationalism is largely descriptive and structural, highlighting empirical shifts like supranational legal protections or diasporic pluralisms that challenge but do not fully supplant national attachments. Cosmopolitan thinkers, such as , for a deliberative global ethic rooted in shared and , often envisioning a world federation or Kantian perpetual peace. Postnationalism, however, accommodates heterogeneous cultural flows and postconventional identities—such as those in Arjun Appadurai's framework of ethnoscapes—without presupposing cosmopolitan universalism, allowing nationalism to persist alongside global integrations. This distinction underscores postnationalism's realism about ongoing national resistances, as opposed to 's aspirational detachment from locality. Postnationalism extends beyond globalism, which primarily denotes economic interdependence through free trade, capital mobility, and multinational corporations, by incorporating political and cultural de-nationalization. Globalism, evident in institutions like the since its 1995 establishment, prioritizes market efficiencies across borders but often reinforces state roles in regulation and welfare. Postnationalism critiques this as insufficient, arguing for a "post" that relocates agency to entities like the or , where decisions on migration, security, and rights bypass national vetoes—differing in origin between leftist critiques of sovereignty and business-driven deterritorialization. In relation to supranationalism, postnationalism shares the pooling of sovereignty in bodies like the EU's (formalized in via the ) but goes further by implying a cultural and identificatory shift away from national loyalty, not just institutional . Supranationalism typically operates on interstate bargains preserving member-state identities, whereas postnationalism anticipates their hybridization or obsolescence through mass immigration and media convergence. Similarly, internationalism—exemplified by of Nations' 1919 founding or post-1945 multilateral —seeks harmony among sovereign equals, accepting national differences in polity and , in contrast to postnationalism's challenge to the hegemony of any singular national model.

Historical Development

Origins in Post-World War II Era

The catastrophic consequences of , including an estimated 70-85 million and widespread devastation across and , profoundly discredited aggressive as a driver of conflict, fostering intellectual and institutional pushes toward international cooperation that prioritized supranational mechanisms over unchecked state sovereignty. This shift was evident in the founding of the on October 24, 1945, by 51 member states, whose codified principles of and , subordinating national interests to global under Article 2(4), which prohibits the or against territorial integrity. The UN's , adopted on December 10, 1948, further entrenched this by asserting universal individual rights—such as freedom from discrimination and right to asylum—transcending national boundaries and , thereby challenging the primacy of state-centric identities. In Europe, the immediate post-war era saw deliberate efforts to integrate economies and institutions to render war between historic rivals "not merely unthinkable, but materially impossible," as articulated in French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman's declaration on May 9, 1950. This led to the Treaty of Paris, signed April 18, 1951, establishing the (ECSC) among , , , , the , and —a supranational authority with independent regulatory powers over vital industries, funded by levies rather than national budgets, marking an early erosion of absolute national control in pursuit of interdependence. The ECSC's High Authority, insulated from direct member state veto, exemplified proto-postnational , driven by pragmatic anti-militarist calculations amid Allied occupation and economic reconstruction needs, though critics noted its limited democratic . These initiatives reflected a causal response to nationalism's role in enabling totalitarian regimes and , with Allied planners—drawing from failures of of Nations—designing structures to bind states through enforceable norms rather than voluntary alliances. (1945-1946) reinforced this by applying to individuals, bypassing national immunities and establishing precedents for that no state could claim exemption from. While these developments did not explicitly use "postnationalism" —coined later in academic —they planted for ideologies diminishing nation-state , evident in rising emphasis on in , where the 1949 prioritized inviolable human dignity (Article 1) over , shaped by and Allied imposition. Such frameworks, however, faced tensions from persistent national interests, as seen in early ECSC disputes over production quotas.

Evolution in the Late 20th Century

In the 1980s, accelerating , marked by economic and the expansion of cross-border , began challenging the primacy of national , fostering early theoretical explorations of postnational forms of membership. Rising labor migration to , particularly through guestworker programs initiated in the and peaking in the crises, led to sustained claims for by non-citizens, increasingly framed through international norms rather than national inclusion. This shift was evident in court rulings across , , and the , where migrants secured social benefits and residence via universal principles embedded in post-1945 instruments like the (1950), decoupling entitlements from full . The of postnationalism crystallized in academic discourse during the early 1990s, coinciding with the dissolution of divisions. Yasemin Nuhoğlu Soysal's Limits of Citizenship: Migrants and Postnational Membership in Europe (1994) formalized "postnational membership," positing that European states had evolved toward a model where personhood-based rights supplanted national membership, drawing on empirical analysis of incorporation policies for over 15 million immigrants by the late 1980s. extended this in works from 1996, highlighting "denationalized citizenship" amid privatized global economies, where supranational regimes like the emerging (established 1995 via the 1986-1994 ) eroded state monopolies on economic regulation. These arguments reflected post-1989 fall, viewing of bipolar as cosmopolitan , though empirical of national identities tempered such claims. Institutionally, European integration accelerated postnational tendencies, with the Single European Act (1986) mandating an internal market by December 31, 1992, through harmonized standards and capital mobility among 12 member states. The Maastricht Treaty (signed February 7, 1992; effective November 1, 1993) introduced Union citizenship for 340 million Europeans, granting rights to reside, work, and vote in local elections across member states independent of nationality, while the Schengen Agreement's implementation from 1995 eliminated internal border controls for signatories. These steps, building on 1985 Schengen foundations, exemplified supranational authority over national borders, though they coexisted with reinforced external controls amid 1990s migration surges from the Balkans and former Soviet states.

Theoretical Foundations

Key Thinkers and Proponents

Yasemin Nuhoğlu Soysal emerged as a foundational theorist of postnational citizenship in the , emphasizing the decoupling of from national membership. In her Limits of Citizenship: Migrants and Postnational Membership in , Soysal analyzed incorporation policies for guestworkers and immigrants across Western European states, including , , and , from the onward. She contended that international regimes, such as the and European conventions, have driven a shift toward postnational membership, granting social and political to non-citizens based on personhood rather than nationality. This framework, she argued, reflects a broader erosion of the nation-state's exclusive control over welfare and participation, supported by data on rising denizenship—residency-based without —in by the early . Jürgen Habermas developed postnational through his for cosmopolitan democracy and constitutional patriotism, critiquing the nation-state's adequacy in a globalized . In The Postnational Constellation: Political Essays (originally published in German in 1998 and translated in 2001), Habermas examined the European Union's evolution since the Maastricht Treaty of 1992 as a model for supranational , where legitimacy derives from rational and shared procedural norms rather than ethnic . He proposed that postnational identities could sustain democratic polities by prioritizing universal and deliberative processes over cultural homogeneity, drawing on Germany's post-1945 constitutional framework as an empirical precedent. Habermas's ideas, rooted in critical , posit that globalization's economic interdependence—evident in trade volumes exceeding national GDP multiples by the late 1990s—necessitates multilevel to address transnational challenges like migration and inequality. David Jacobson extended postnational arguments by tracing the historical displacement of citizenship by human rights norms, particularly in immigration contexts. In his 1996 book Rights Across Borders: Immigration and the Decline of Citizenship, Jacobson documented how post-World War II developments, including the 1951 Refugee Convention and U.S. civil rights expansions in the 1960s, shifted authority from sovereign states to international institutions, enabling rights claims by non-nationals. He cited empirical trends, such as the U.S. granting asylum and welfare to over 1 million immigrants annually by the mid-1990s without proportional citizenship uptake, as evidence of postnational dynamics where borders constrain mobility less than universal entitlements. Jacobson's analysis highlights causal factors like judicial activism and NGO advocacy in fostering this paradigm. Arjun Appadurai contributed to postnational thought by theorizing globalization's cultural disjunctures, which fragment national identities. In Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization (1996), he introduced the concept of "scapes"—ethnoscapes, mediascapes, and others—to describe flows of people, media, and ideas that bypass state control, as seen in remittances exceeding $100 billion globally by the late 1990s and diasporic networks sustaining transnational loyalties. Appadurai argued these dynamics promote postnational imaginaries, where collective identities form around global cultural exchanges rather than territorial sovereignty, challenging statist narratives of homogeneity.

Philosophical Underpinnings

Postnationalism's philosophical roots lie in , which emphasizes universal moral duties transcending national allegiances, as initially articulated by ancient Stoics like of Sinope, who claimed to be a "citizen of the " (kosmopolitês), and later systematized in Enlightenment thought. advanced this in his "Toward Perpetual ," advocating a voluntary of republican states to prevent , complemented by a cosmopolitan right to hospitality that permits temporary visits across borders for peaceful interaction, without endorsing the dissolution of sovereign nations. Kant's framework prioritizes individual autonomy and rational universalism over ethnic or cultural particularism, influencing postnational arguments for global ethical norms, though he retained the nation-state as a bulwark against despotism. In the 20th century, extended these ideas through , proposing a "postnational constellation" where supranational institutions like the foster based on , allowing citizens to participate in law-making beyond national parliaments. reconstructs Kant's cosmopolitan right for contemporary , arguing that legitimacy derives from inclusive among all affected parties, rather than national alone, as detailed in his 2001 collection The Postnational Constellation. This approach critiques methodological nationalism—the assumption that the nation-state is the primary unit of analysis—favoring a "world domestic politics" responsive to transnational risks like or migration. Ulrich Beck complemented this with his "cosmopolitan vision" in works like The Cosmopolitan Vision (2006), framing globalization as a "cosmopolitan condition" that generates both national and global imperatives simultaneously, urging a "both/and" logic over zero-sum oppositions between local and universal identities. Beck's sociological cosmopolitanism, rooted in risk society theory, posits that shared global threats erode the nation-state's monopoly on loyalty, necessitating reflexive institutions that integrate subnational, national, and supranational scales without fully supplanting cultural differences. These underpinnings contrast with communitarian defenses of nationalism, such as David Miller's emphasis on shared national narratives for social cohesion, highlighting postnationalism's reliance on abstract universalism potentially at odds with empirical attachments to homeland and tradition.

Institutional Examples

European Union and Supranationalism

The represents a prominent institutional manifestation of supranationalism, wherein member states have voluntarily pooled aspects of their to create a framework that operates above the national level, fostering economic, legal, and partial political integration as a response to post-World War II divisions and the need for strength in global affairs. This process began with foundational treaties such as the Treaty establishing the in 1951 and the Treaty of Rome in 1957, which established supranational oversight for key industries to prevent conflict, evolving into broader integration via the Single European Act of 1986 that introduced qualified majority voting in the Council, reducing veto powers and enabling decision-making on internal market rules. The Maastricht Treaty, signed on February 7, 1992, and entering into force on November 1, 1993, formalized the EU as a political union, introducing European citizenship that grants rights such as free movement, residence, and voting in European Parliament elections independent of national status, positioning the EU as a potential postnational entity where loyalty shifts from states to a shared polity. Supranational elements are embodied in institutions like the , which holds exclusive initiative for and enforces compliance; the , whose rulings establish the primacy and direct effect of EU law over conflicting national measures since landmark cases in the 1960s; and the use of qualified majority voting across policy areas, which by the of December 13, 2007 (effective December 1, 2009), extended to foreign policy and matters, compelling states to accept majority outcomes even against national preferences. This pooling of sovereignty—defined as transferring decision-making from unilateral state control to collective mechanisms—has enabled achievements like the single market operational since January 1, 1993, encompassing 450 million and eliminating internal tariffs, and the euro currency adopted by 20 states since January 1, 1999, which centralizes monetary policy under the European Central Bank. In postnational terms, these structures aim to cultivate a supranational identity, with EU citizenship serving as a "fundamental status" that supplements national citizenship, potentially detaching rights from ethnic or territorial nation-state ties and promoting multiple allegiances. However, the EU's supranational model has faced empirical challenges to realizing full postnationalism, as national sovereignty persists in core areas like taxation, execution, and defense, where unanimity requirements maintain vetoes, and public identification remains predominantly national—surveys indicate only about 60% of citizens feel attached to the EU versus over 90% to their nation-state. Critics argue this arrangement erodes democratic accountability, as unelected commissioners wield significant power and majority voting overrides minority states, contributing to legitimacy crises evident in events like the 2005 French and Dutch referenda rejecting the Constitutional and the 2016 referendum, where 51.9% of UK voters cited loss as a key concern. Furthermore, supranational directives have occasionally conflicted with national priorities, such as migration policies under the Dublin Regulation, amplifying perceptions of a "superstate" imposition that undermines cultural cohesion without equivalent postnational solidarity. While proponents view this as pragmatic interdependence for economic competitiveness, causal analysis reveals that incomplete sovereignty transfer—retaining opt-outs and national parliaments' subsidiarity scrutiny—has sustained intergovernmental tensions rather than transcending them toward a cohesive postnational order.

Other Regional and Global Instances

The African Union (AU), founded on July 9, 2002, to replace the Organization of African Unity (established in 1963), embodies regional integration efforts with supranational aspirations, including provisions for collective intervention in member states to address grave threats like genocide or war crimes under Article 4(h) of its Constitutive Act. This framework prioritizes continental peace and security mechanisms, such as the African Peace and Security Architecture, which deploys standby forces and has authorized missions overriding national consent, as seen in the 2011 Libya intervention authorization. However, empirical adherence remains limited, with only selective enforcement due to persistent national sovereignty claims and uneven compliance among 55 member states, reflecting postnational ideals tempered by practical intergovernmental realities. In Latin America, the Southern Common Market (Mercosur), established by the Treaty of Asunción on March 26, 1991, among , , , and (with Venezuela's suspended membership since 2016), pursues through a and , fostering postnational elements like free movement of goods, services, and people via the 2002 Residencia Agreement and 2009 Ciudadanía Agreement. These enable reciprocal residency and work rights for over 290 million citizens, diminishing border barriers, though disputes over tariff exceptions— and invoked flexibility clauses over 100 times by 2020—underscore incomplete supranationalism and reliance on national ratification. Globally, the United Nations (UN), formed on October 24, 1945, advances postnational governance through binding instruments like the Universal Declaration of Human Rights () and treaty bodies enforcing , exemplified by the of Justice's advisory opinions and the Security Council's sanctions regimes, which have constrained sovereign actions in cases such as Iraq's 1990-2003 oil-for-food program. Yet, the veto permanent members in the Security Council—exercised 293 times by 2023—preserves great-power sovereignty, limiting deeper postnational authority amid rising nationalist challenges to .

National Case Studies

Canada and Multiculturalism

Canada's federal government adopted multiculturalism as an official policy on October 8, 1971, when Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau announced it in the , making the country the first to formally recognize multiculturalism at the national level. This policy emerged as an extension of the 1963-1969 on Bilingualism and Biculturalism, which initially addressed tensions between English- and French-speaking but evolved to encompass the contributions of other ethnic groups, rejecting assimilation in favor of preserving cultural distinctiveness within a framework of equality and mutual . The approach contrasted with the American "melting pot" model by promoting a "cultural mosaic," where immigrants retain heritage identities while participating in Canadian civic life. The policy was codified in the Canadian Multiculturalism Act of July 21, 1988, under Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's Progressive Conservative government, which mandated federal institutions to promote multiculturalism, combat discrimination, and foster intercultural understanding. In the context of postnationalism, Canada's multiculturalism has been interpreted as diminishing the primacy of a singular national identity, prioritizing multiple, overlapping loyalties over a unified ethnic or historical core. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau explicitly described Canada as a "postnational" state in a 2015 New York Times interview, stating there is "no core identity, no mainstream," reflecting a vision where national borders and traditional identities yield to globalized diversity and shared human values. This stance aligns with postnational theorists who view multiculturalism as eroding sovereignty-bound identities, though proponents like Trudeau frame it as a strength enabling Canada to adapt to demographic shifts, with visible minorities comprising 26.5% of the population by the 2021 census. Empirical assessments of multiculturalism's impact on social cohesion present mixed results. Studies indicate that the policy correlates with higher immigrant political participation and compared to assimilationist models, with no that it reduces inter-ethnic trust; for instance, cross-national analyses show multicultural policies do not diminish generalized trust and may enhance it by affirming . However, qualitative research in diverse urban areas like Toronto's Jane-Finch neighborhood reveals persistent informal segregation and challenges in building shared civic bonds, with residents reporting barriers to cohesion due to and cultural enclaves rather than policy alone. Quebec has resisted federal , favoring "interculturalism" since the 1990s to prioritize integration into a distinct francophone society, highlighting regional tensions within the policy's national application. Critics contend that multiculturalism undermines by emphasizing differences over unifying , potentially fostering parallel societies and weakening attachment to the nation-state. For example, historical analyses argue that high under multicultural frameworks has historically complicated forging a cohesive identity, exacerbated by regionalism and linguistic divides. Conservative voices, including former Stephen , have advocated "vertical mosaic" reforms to prioritize in integration, warning against postnational dilutions that could erode . Recent debates, amid record levels exceeding 1 million annually by 2023, have intensified concerns over housing strains and cultural fragmentation, with polls showing declining public confidence in multiculturalism's sustainability amid perceived failures in assimilation. These critiques, often from non-academic sources skeptical of institutional biases favoring diversity narratives, underscore causal links between policy-driven pluralism and observable identity fragmentation, though empirical causation remains contested.

United States and Immigration Debates

The exemplifies postnational tendencies in immigration policy and discourse, where mass inflows and are framed by proponents as reinforcing a creedal, proposition-based detached from ethnic or cultural homogeneity. The and Act of 1965 abolished national-origin quotas favoring European sources, prioritizing and skills, which shifted demographic composition: the foreign-born share of the from 4.7% in 1970 to 13.9% by 2015, reaching an estimated 16.2% or 53.3 million by January 2025. This change, unintended by some legislators who anticipated minimal non-European influx, accelerated and Asian immigration, with over 11 million arrivals between 2020 and mid-2025 alone, including surges in unauthorized entries exceeding 2 million annually at peaks in fiscal years 2022-2024. Proponents of expansive immigration, often aligned with postnational views, argue it embodies America's exceptionalism as a "nation of immigrants" defined by universal ideals rather than inherited culture, fostering innovation and economic vitality while diluting parochial nationalisms. Policies like sanctuary jurisdictions and calls for pathways to citizenship for millions of unauthorized residents reflect subnational assertions of postnational citizenship, prioritizing human rights and cosmopolitanism over federal sovereignty. However, empirical data indicate challenges to social cohesion: high immigration correlates with persistent ethnic enclaves, lower intergroup trust, and slower assimilation rates compared to earlier waves, as diverse communities exhibit reduced civic engagement and generalized reciprocity in short-term studies. Political scientist Samuel Huntington contended in Who Are We? (2004) that unchecked Mexican immigration, bilingualism, and multiculturalism erode the Anglo-Protestant core sustaining American identity, risking a "de facto multilingual, bicultural society" incompatible with unified governance. Critics highlight causal links between rapid demographic shifts and frayed national bonds, noting that mass low-skilled strains public resources—net fiscal costs estimated at billions annually—and fosters parallel societies resistant to core values like and English primacy. encounters, peaking at over 2.4 million in FY2023 before sharp declines to 8,725 in May 2025 under stricter , sovereignty debates, with postnational advocates decrying restrictions as xenophobic while opponents invoke first principles of against transformative inflows altering electoral and cultural landscapes. These tensions reveal postnationalism's practical limits, as public opinion polls since the 1965 Act show consistent majorities favoring reduced levels, reflecting intuitive recognition of 's in defining, rather than transcending, national viability.

Cultural and Social Manifestations

In Canadian , postnational themes have been advanced through campaigns that prioritize identity over national . A campaign by the (CBC) in the early 2020s featured the "It's not how Canadian you are, it's who you are in ," aligning with Justin Trudeau's 2015 declaration of as the world's first postnational state, where supplants traditional national cohesion. This approach, disseminated via , reflects institutional efforts to normalize fluid, non-territorial belonging amid high levels, with admitting over 1 million newcomers in 2023 alone. Francophone European film and television since exemplify postnational through hybridized productions involving diverse , genres, and media formats that blur national distinctions. Scholarly highlights a shift from earlier singular visions, such as those in Luc Besson's 1990s works, to broader transnational collaborations emphasizing global "Gallicisms"—French-influenced adapted worldwide—fostering narratives of cultural mobility and supranational identity. These depictions often prioritize cosmopolitan ensembles over rooted national loyalties, though critics note such content may overlook persistent ethnic tensions in source societies like , where debates have intensified since the . Science fiction and frequently explore postnational motifs by envisioning futures where planetary or unity eclipses state borders, as in narratives critiquing imperial through interstellar . For example, works addressing postcolonial dynamics in speculative settings, such as those analyzed in studies of science fiction, depict hybrid worlds challenging , echoing real-world pressures. However, many such stories retain underlying nationalist undercurrents, as seen in American-centric operas reinforcing rather than pure postnationalism. Mainstream media's promotion of these themes aligns with broader institutional tendencies toward globalist framing, potentially underrepresenting empirical on nationalism's resilience, such as rising populist support in post-2015.

In Sports and Identity

In professional football, postnational trends manifest through the increasing multinational composition of national teams, driven by immigration, naturalization, and flexible eligibility rules. FIFA regulations permit players to switch national team allegiance if they have played fewer than three competitive matches before age 21 and meet residency or heritage criteria, enabling representation based on adopted nationality rather than birthplace alone. By 2018, teams such as Morocco's World Cup squad featured numerous Europe-born players of Moroccan descent, exemplifying how global mobility blurs traditional national boundaries in elite competition. Similarly, during UEFA Euro 2008, journalist described the tournament as the "first postnational" European Championship, noting that squads from nations like the and included significant numbers of players with immigrant parentage or foreign birth, shifting focus from ethnic homogeneity to civic inclusion. Club-level football further illustrates postnational , as global fanbases prioritize transnational over national allegiances. In a study of United supporters in the late 1990s and early 2000s, sociologist Delanty argued that the club's and diverse player rosters cultivated a "post-national" in , where identity derived from shared consumption and cosmopolitan values rather than state . This pattern extends to leagues like the English Premier League, where multinational squads—such as Manchester City's 2023 roster with players from 15 countries—foster supporter identities tied to global capital and performance metrics over parochial nationalism. Empirical surveys across 25 countries in 2017 confirmed elevated sport nationalism overall, yet club affiliations often eclipse national ones in daily engagement, particularly in urban, multicultural settings. Beyond team sports, the International Olympic Committee's Refugee Olympic Team, introduced in 2016, embodies postnationalism by allowing stateless or displaced athletes to compete under the IOC flag rather than a national one. At the 2024 Paris Olympics, the team comprised 10 athletes from diverse origins, including , , and , highlighting sports as a platform for universal human rights over sovereign affiliation. This initiative, while symbolic and small-scale, underscores causal shifts from geopolitical displacement to individualized, borderless athletic pursuit, though it coexists with dominant national rivalries in events like the Games' medal tallies. In surfing subcultures, as examined in Irish contexts, participants often embrace "no borders" post-national identities, prioritizing wave-riding ethos and global networks over state-based competition. These examples reflect how sports identities evolve amid globalization, yet empirical data indicate nationalism's resilience, with international tournaments still amplifying in-group pride.

Criticisms and Controversies

Erosion of Sovereignty and National Identity

Critics of postnationalism argue that the shift toward supranational governance structures undermines the traditional of nation-states by transferring key powers to entities with limited democratic accountability. In the , member states have delegated authority over trade, competition , and monetary affairs (for ) to Brussels-based institutions, resulting in a pooling of that restricts independent national policies. For instance, during the 2015 , EU-wide asylum directives compelled like and to accept relocation quotas, overriding their domestic border controls and fueling domestic backlash. This erosion manifests empirically in reduced national control over fiscal and regulatory matters, as evidenced by the EU's enforcement of the , which imposed measures on in 2010-2018, limiting ' budgetary despite referenda opposing such constraints. in 2016 exemplified a , with 52% of voters endorsing withdrawal to "take back control" from EU competencies, highlighting perceived sovereignty deficits in areas like fisheries and lawmaking. Such transfers, proponents of national contend, create a democratic deficit where unelected bodies like the European Commission wield veto power over national parliaments. Regarding , postnational emphases on and are criticized for diluting shared cultural cohesion, fostering fragmented allegiances over unified national narratives. Cross-national surveys across 63 countries indicate a negative between globalization indices—encompassing migration and supranational integration—and attachment to , with higher exposure linked to weaker feelings of and belonging. In , where became policy in , national has declined among younger cohorts, dropping from 89% in 2010 to 75% by 2023, attributed by analysts to policies prioritizing hyphenated identities over a singular Canadian ethos. In the United States, Gallup polls reveal American pride at a record low of 38% "extremely or very proud" in 2024, with steeper declines among demographics exposed to high immigration and identity politics, correlating with multiculturalism's emphasis on subgroup loyalties over civic nationalism. Empirical studies challenge postnational models, finding scant evidence for sustained transnational identities supplanting national ones; instead, ethnic minorities in Britain and often mobilize claims within national frameworks rather than postnational arenas. Critics, including political theorists, assert this identity erosion risks social fragmentation, as causal links from supranational policies to weakened national symbols—such as declining flag veneration or historical literacy—undermine the motivational basis for collective self-governance.

Social Cohesion and Cultural Impacts

Postnationalism, by emphasizing supranational identities and multicultural policies over national homogeneity, has been associated with diminished social cohesion in empirical studies. Research indicates that high levels of ethnic diversity, often promoted under postnational frameworks, correlate with reduced interpersonal trust and . For instance, a study by Putnam analyzing U.S. communities found that ethnic diversity leads to lower , with residents in diverse areas "hunkering down" by avoiding neighbors, participating less in community activities, and trusting others less, an effect persisting even after controlling for socioeconomic factors. Similar patterns emerged in European contexts; a 2014 analysis of 65,000 individuals across multiple by the Transatlantic Trends survey revealed that greater immigrant concentrations inversely affect generalized trust, particularly in nations with rapid demographic shifts like Sweden and the Netherlands. These findings challenge assumptions of seamless integration, suggesting causal links between policy-driven diversity and fragmented social bonds, as parallel societies form where shared norms erode. Cultural impacts manifest in the dilution of host-nation traditions and the rise of identitarian fragmentation. In postnational states like , official since the has prioritized group over assimilation, leading to documented cultural enclaves where English proficiency lags and intermarriage rates remain low; from showed that only 8.5% of second-generation immigrants from non-Western backgrounds married outside their group, compared to higher rates in assimilationist models. This fosters "tribal" , as noted in a , where incentivizes ethnic over national unity, exacerbating divisions evident in urban riots and demands for accommodations. In , France's post-1990s immigration surge under cosmopolitan ideals has seen cultural clashes, with 2023 government reports citing over 1,000 "sensitive urban zones" where republican values like secularism are undermined by imported customs, contributing to events like the 2005 and 2023 banlieue unrest. Critics, drawing from evolutionary psychology, argue this reflects human preferences for kin-based cooperation, rendering postnational cultural pluralism unstable without enforced homogeneity. Long-term data underscores risks to cohesion, including elevated crime and welfare strains in high-immigration areas. A 2018 Danish study tracking 1990s cohorts found immigrants from non-Western countries overrepresented in violent crime by factors of 3-5, correlating with low assimilation and cultural mismatch, which erodes public confidence in postnational governance. In the UK, the 2011 census revealed rapid shifts in cities like London, where native Britons became minorities, coinciding with a 20% drop in social trust per British Social Attitudes surveys from 2003-2019. While proponents cite economic benefits, meta-analyses like those from the National Academies of Sciences (2017) confirm short-term fiscal costs and cultural adaptation challenges, with second-generation outcomes often worsening in enclaves, supporting causal claims that postnationalism prioritizes abstract ideals over empirical social stability. Academic sources advancing pro-diversity views, often from institutions with noted ideological skews, tend to underemphasize these dynamics, as critiqued in reviews of migration literature for selective data use.

Empirical Evidence and Real-World Impacts

Evidence of Persistence of Nationalism

Electoral outcomes across in demonstrated sustained nationalist sentiment, with parties emphasizing national sovereignty and immigration controls securing significant gains in the elections held between and 9. The far-right group increased its seats, reflecting voter priorities on border over supranational integration, as evidenced by strong performances from parties like France's , which captured around 31% of the vote. Similarly, Germany's (AfD) achieved second place nationally with approximately 16% support, underscoring resistance to EU-wide policies perceived as eroding national control. In the United Kingdom, the 2016 Brexit referendum, where 51.9% voted to leave the European Union on June 23, exemplified the enduring appeal of national self-determination, with subsequent polling indicating persistent public attachment to restored sovereignty despite economic challenges. Post-Brexit, nationalist-leaning Reform UK garnered 14.3% of the vote in the July 4, 2024, general election, translating to five seats and signaling ongoing dissatisfaction with open-border globalism. United States surveys in 2024 and 2025 revealed robust public concern for national borders, with a Harvard/Harris poll from October 1-2, 2025, finding 56% of registered voters supporting deportation of all illegal immigrants, a stance aligned with prioritizing national sovereignty. Gallup data from June 2025 indicated that, despite a decline, 58% of Americans remained extremely or very proud of their nationality, maintaining a majority attachment to national identity amid debates on immigration levels. Global surveys highlight the tenacity of nation-state loyalty; cross-national analyses from the World Values Survey show that in over 80% of countries, a majority of respondents prioritize national identity over cosmopolitan affiliations, with attachments strengthening in response to perceived threats from globalization. In contexts of rapid migration and economic interdependence, such as the EU, empirical studies confirm that national pride correlates positively with opposition to further integration, as seen in persistent Euroskepticism rates exceeding 40% in member states like Italy and Hungary. Despite demographic pressures such as low birth rates and aging populations prompting policy shifts toward increased immigration in countries like Germany to sustain economic viability and social systems, nationalism has persisted and even intensified in response to migration challenges. In the EU context, these dynamics have fueled support for nationalist movements amid cultural conflicts, economic anxieties, and integration difficulties, with globalization facing backlash that reinforces rather than erodes national identities.

Measured Outcomes of Postnational Policies

In communities with higher ethnic diversity, empirical studies have consistently found reduced levels of social trust and . Putnam's of survey respondents across 41 U.S. communities revealed that greater ethnic diversity correlates with lower trust in neighbors, reduced , and diminished political participation, effects persisting even within ethnic groups and across socioeconomic controls. Similar patterns emerged in European contexts, where perceived neighborhood diversity is linked to declining social cohesion and increased , independent of economic . These findings challenge assumptions of automatic integration benefits, as diversity's short-term "hunkering down" effect undermines the interpersonal ties necessary for . Postnational policies emphasizing rapid demographic shifts have shown elevated crime involvement among immigrant cohorts in several Western nations. In Sweden, foreign-born individuals and their descendants accounted for 58% of suspects in crimes on reasonable grounds in 2017, despite comprising about 20% of the population, with overrepresentation in violent offenses like . Germany's 2015-2016 refugee influx correlated with localized increases in and violent crime rates, particularly in receiving higher asylum seeker proportions, after controlling for socioeconomic factors. Self-reported crime data from Sweden further indicate persistently higher offending rates among non-Western immigrants over time, suggesting integration challenges exacerbate rather than mitigate risks. While aggregate economic contributions may offset some costs, these patterns highlight causal links between unchecked inflows and public safety strains, often underreported due to institutional reluctance to disaggregate by origin. Fiscal outcomes of postnational immigration vary by migrant skill levels but frequently yield net burdens for low-skilled cohorts predominant in humanitarian streams. OECD analyses across member states estimate immigrants' net fiscal contribution as positive in aggregate, driven by high-skilled workers, yet non-EU migrants from developing regions impose lifetime costs averaging 10-20% of GDP per capita due to welfare dependency and lower employment rates. In Canada, where multiculturalism policies have facilitated annual inflows exceeding 1% of population since 2015, rapid population growth has intensified housing shortages, with immigration accounting for over 90% of demand increases in major cities by 2023, contributing to affordability crises without commensurate infrastructure expansion. Government evaluations affirm multiculturalism's role in economic dynamism, yet overlook how diversity erodes the high baseline trust—Canada's interpersonal trust rate at 60% in 2020—essential for sustaining redistributive systems amid fiscal pressures. These metrics underscore that while selective policies yield gains, postnational openness prioritizing volume over assimilation often amplifies long-term public expenditure without proportional societal returns.

Contemporary Debates and Future Prospects

Resurgence of Nationalist Movements Post-2020

The , beginning in early , accelerated nationalist tendencies worldwide as governments imposed closures and prioritized domestic over international , leading to a documented resurgence in nationalist and policies. Scholarly analyses indicate that crises like pandemics condition support for by emphasizing national and toward supranational institutions. This shift persisted beyond the acute phase of , with populist and nationalist movements gaining traction amid ongoing challenges such as disruptions and debates. In Europe, nationalist parties achieved significant electoral successes starting in 2021. Italy's , led by , secured a parliamentary in September 2022, forming a focused on controls and national . The 2024 European Parliament elections saw far-right groupings, including those advocating stricter EU border policies, increase their seats substantially, reflecting voter discontent with postnational migration frameworks. In Germany, the (AfD) doubled its vote share to 20.8% in the February 2025 federal , becoming the second-largest and amplifying calls for reduced and EU skepticism. Austria's Freedom Party similarly won a landmark victory in late 2024, continuing the pattern of nationalist advances in response to perceived failures in multicultural integration policies. Across the Atlantic, Trump's reelection in the 2024 U.S. exemplified the nationalist resurgence, with his campaign emphasizing security, economic , and principles that resonated amid post-pandemic and migration pressures. Trump's , the first Republican popular vote win in two decades, correlated with heightened support for policies prioritizing over globalist agendas. Globally, similar trends emerged, as evidenced by Javier Milei's 2023 in and Narendra Modi's continued mandate in in 2024, where nationalist platforms addressed economic and cultural preservation. These developments underscore a causal link between post-2020 disruptions—including the , the 2022 exacerbating energy dependencies, and unchecked migration—and a voter pivot toward as a bulwark against perceived erosions of . Empirical from outcomes refute narratives of declining , showing instead sustained or increased support despite media portrayals often biased toward internationalist . While some studies noted temporary dips in populist sentiment during pandemic peaks, longitudinal trends confirm a robust rebound, driven by tangible policy failures in postnational experiments.

Potential Trajectories in a Multipolar World

In a multipolar world, where power is distributed among rival centers including the United States, China, Russia, India, and regional blocs like the European Union, postnationalism confronts structural incentives favoring national sovereignty and competitive statecraft. Realist international relations theory posits that anarchy among peer competitors compels states to prioritize internal cohesion and autonomous decision-making to deter aggression and seize opportunities, undermining supranational dilutions of authority. This dynamic has manifested in China's "national rejuvenation" doctrine since 2012, which integrates Han-centric nationalism with assertive foreign policy to counter perceived encirclement, as evidenced by territorial claims in the South China Sea advancing 200 nautical miles by 2023. Similarly, Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 underscored a rejection of postnational norms, with President Putin framing the conflict as existential defense of Russian identity against Western liberal internationalism. Postnational experiments, such as the , may trajectory toward hybridization or fragmentation under multipolar pressures. Formed in 1993 as a post-World War II antidote to , the EU's supranational institutions have enabled —evidenced by intra-EU trade comprising 59% of members' total by 2022—but falter on and migration amid great-power rivalry. The 2016 , driven by concerns, and subsequent populist gains in ( securing 31.4% in 2024 EU elections) and (Brothers of Italy's 26% in 2022 nationals) illustrate internal centrifugal forces amplified by external threats like Russia's energy coercion post-2022. Analysts project that without U.S. —waning since the and accelerated by China's GDP parity projection by 2030—the EU could devolve into a looser confederation, with states like Hungary and Poland vetoing deeper integration 17 times on foreign policy since 2014. Alternative paths include selective postnationalism in non-security domains, such as climate accords, but subordinated to national vetoes. The 2015 , ratified by 196 parties, achieved emissions pledges covering 97% of global output by 2020, yet multipolar discord—China's coal expansion adding 47 gigawatts in 2023 alone—highlights enforcement limits without unified sovereignty. Technologically driven trajectories, like digital nomadism borderless labor (global remote workers reaching 35 million by 2023), could foster cosmopolitan elites, but backlash in multipolar hotspots, such as 2.5 million irregular entries in 2023, reinforces nativist policies. Demographic declines and low birth rates have prompted policy shifts toward increased immigration to counter aging populations, as in Germany, yet these measures have often heightened nationalism through integration challenges and cultural conflicts, with less-skilled inflows particularly associated with rising nationalistic sentiments. Globalization's economic anxieties have similarly elicited protectionist responses and cultural preservation efforts, sustaining nationalism rather than eroding it. Hybrid models, blending regional economic postnationalism with militaries, may persist in secondary powers, but great-power favors the latter, per assessments of declining U.S.-led unipolarity since 2001.

References

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