Citations:ethnarchism


 * 2010, Sabrina P. Ramet, Radical Right in Central and Eastern Europe Since 1989, Penn State Press (ISBN 9780271043791), page 25:
 * Ethnarchism, the demand for socially homogeneous societies, rejects liberal claims that power should belong to &quot;the people,&quot; and argues, instead, that power should belong to "the racially or ethnically pure dominant majority within any arbitrarily given territory that may or may not belong to a state, that may or may not be under the authority of a legally constituted government." Tamas equates ethnarchy with "ethno-anarchism,"
 * 2010, A. Aktar, N. Kizilyürek, U. Ozkirimli, Niyazi K?z?lyürek, Nationalism in the Troubled Triangle: Cyprus, Greece and Turkey, Springer (ISBN 9780230297326), page 202:
 * Ethnarchism and privileges
 * Of course, this plan of ethnarchism acquired interesting dimensions, as far as Turkish Cypriots were concerned.
 * 2013, Andrekos Varnava, Michalis N. Michael, The Archbishops of Cyprus in the Modern Age: The Changing Role of the Archbishop-Ethnarch, their Identities and Politics, Cambridge Scholars Publishing (ISBN 9781443850810), page 255:
 * From Irredentist Ethnarchism to Independence
 * The continuous radicalisation of the two communities forced Makarios into a constant radicalisation of his ...
 * 2014, Lenia Kouneni, The Legacy of Antiquity: New Perspectives in the Reception of the Classical World, Cambridge Scholars Publishing (ISBN 9781443867740), page 240:
 * ... in contrast to the Joachimist ethnarchism where ethnos was identified with the Orthodox flock (see below).