Talk:Nativism (politics): Difference between revisions

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imported>Richard Jensen
(let's split)
imported>John Stephenson
m (Talk:Nativism moved to Talk:Nativism (politics): agreed on Talk page; disambiguation from the meaning in psychology/cog sci/linguistics etc.)
 

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 Definition Interests of certain established inhabitants of an area or nation as compared to claims of newcomers or immigrants. [d] [e]
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Nativism in psychology/linguistics/philosophy/biology/cognitive science...

'Nativism' is also an important concept in those fields, broadly meaning that certain properties of the mind are inherent, 'hard wired' etc., rather than learnt. As a Brit I admit I'd not really come across the political meaning. How widely used is it States-side? I ask in order to start a discussion over moving this to Nativism (politics) or some-such, versus giving it top-billing by leaving it here. From my point of view, the other sense of 'nativism' is so controversial in other fields that there's a case to be made for a future article to be placed here, with a link to Nativism (politics). John Stephenson 07:11, 27 May 2008 (CDT)

I looked at usage by scholars and there's an interesting split. in Books, the dominant use is nativism=hatred of outsiders, as used in history, politics, & sociology. see Google books. However in journal articles the dominant use seems to be Nativism-vs-empiricism see for articles. So we need two articles I think: Nativism (politics) and Nativism (psychology). Richard Jensen 12:33, 27 May 2008 (CDT)