Nation building in Timor-Leste: national identity contests and crises

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2014-08

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University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Timor-Leste, which emerged from Portuguese colonialism and Indonesian occupation to become the world's newest nation in 2002, provides a particularly interesting and ongoing example of modern nation building. In examining Timor-Leste and specific aspects of its nation building experience, this dissertation will make three related arguments. First, despite the fact that nation and state builders have tended to focus their efforts on the institutions of governance and state, more symbolic aspects of nationhood-including monuments, heroes, rituals and narratives-have also played an important role in strengthening Timorese national identity and fusing the state to the nation. Second, although nationalism scholarship has emphasized the role of political elites in the construction of a sense of national identity in the public imagination, Timor-Leste's experience suggests that the vision of the nation is not simply conceived by political elites, communicated down, and instilled in the public consciousness. Instead, the process there has been negotiated and even actively contested by various groups and institutions across society that have successfully asserted their own alternative views of the nation. Finally, a weak sense of Timorese national identity resulting from insufficient attention in the early post-independence period to the symbolic aspects of nationhood and active contests over a shared vision of the nation contributed to political crises and instability. Subsequent efforts to adopt symbols and promote a more inclusive sense of national identity, however, have begun to consolidate Timorese nationhood. Although each country is unique, Timor-Leste's experience suggests that greater attention to the symbolic aspects of nationhood and how they are contested in society may shed light on potential sources of instability in other countries similarly engaged in nation building efforts.

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Portuguese colonialism

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Theses for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (University of Hawaii at Manoa). Political Science.

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