Individualistic and Collectivistic Orientations: Examining the Relationship between Ethnicity and National Attachment in Ghana
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Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism
Abstract
Ethnicity is regarded as the greatest threat to national attachment by both politicians
and scholars. However, ethnicity is only one of the many forms of identification
which could potentially clash with national attachment. This study
therefore examines the relationship between ethnicity and national attachment
by asking a general question: what is the impact of alternative group loyalties
on national attachment? To answer this question, I develop a measure of national
attachment drawing on several sentiments oriented towards the state. Using a survey
of 996 university students, I find varying degrees of intensity of the
selected identities. Specifically, while descriptive analysis supports recent reports
of the declining salience of ethnicity in Ghana, inferential analysis contradicts
theoretical expectations that the increasing salience of ethnicity would negatively
affect national attachment. Conceptually, it is possible to map the various identities
onto a collectivistic-individualistic scale. Individualistic orientations undermine
national attachment, while collectivistic orientations boost it. I argue that rather
than being contradictory impulses, ethnicity and national attachment are both
underlain by the same collectivistic orientation, pointing to the importance of social
rootedness. I deploy qualitative and historical data to give substance and texture to
these findings.
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Research Article