Between Kin and Cosmopolis: An Ethic of the Nation (Didsbury Lecture)
English

About The Book

The nation-state is here to stay. Thirty years ago it was fashionable to predict its imminent demise but the sudden break-up of the Soviet Union in the 1990s unshackled long-repressed nationalisms and generated a host of new states. The closer integration of the European Union has given intra-national nationalisms a new lease of life confirming the viability of small nation-states under a supra-national umbrella--after all if Ireland and Iceland then why not Scotland and Catalonia? And then the world stage has seen new and powerful national players moving from the wings to the centre: China India and Brazil are full of a sense of growing into their own national destinies and are in no mood either to dissolve into or to defer to some larger body. Nations nationalisms and nation-states are persistent facts but what should we think of them morally? Surely humanity not a nation should claim our loyalty? How can it be right to exclude foreigners by policing borders? Can a liberal nation-state thrive without a cohering public orthodoxy? Does national sovereignty confer immunity? Is national separatism always justified? These are urgent questions. Between Kin and Cosmopolis offers timely Christian answers. The debate about immigration has become the most toxic issue in politics. We have lacked a framework for considered discussion and populism has stepped in. In this well-researched and articulate hundred pages on national identity and independence Nigel Biggar gives us just such a framework demonstrating yet again the value of public theology. He makes an outstanding contribution. --Iain R Torrance University of Aberdeen Aberdeen Scotland Biggar writes with the full command of a capacious and prudential theological tradition without ever being obscure jargonistic or dry. He is never afraid of strong judgements but also never fails to give all his reasoning respectfully. The result is a forceful well-paced text that commands attention and respect. --Christopher J. Insole Durham University Durham UK Nigel Biggar is Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology and Director of the McDonald Centre for Theology Ethics and Public Life at the University of Oxford. His most recent books are In Defence of War (2013) and Behaving in Public: How to Do Christian Ethics (2011).
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