Abstract
Introduction
Those who show why cultural diversity and intercultural dialogue are valuable, and who advocate policies of multiculturalism like declaring a political community to be multicultural, or teaching children about its multicultural nature, are often referred to as ‘multiculturalists’ (Modood, 2014: 31; Parekh, 2000a: 6). Such ‘multiculturalists’ also advocate the importance of national identities (Modood, 2013: 135; Parekh, 2000a: 230), yet many claim that ‘multiculturalists’ do not do so or that they have an ‘anti-national bias’ (Barry, 2001: 77; Goodhart, 2013: 201). Likewise, scholars frequently examine why and how ‘multiculturalists’ advocate different policies of multiculturalism (Barry, 2001: 315; Crowder, 2013: 50; Jones, 2015: 128). But scholars seldom examine why and how ‘multiculturalists’ advocate national identities and this article helps to fill this gap by examining how the Commission for Multi-Ethnic Britain (CMEB) did so. I will show that the CMEB's report reflects a previously unnoticed way of thinking about the nature and worth of national identities that its chairman, and prominent political theorist, Bhikhu Parekh, had been devising since the 1970s. This way of thinking is shown to be distinct as it differs to how other prominent thinkers discuss national identities, and valuable as it avoids the questionable ways in which these thinkers discuss the nature and worth of national identities.
Those familiar with the CMEB's Report may think it strange to claim that this report reflects a valuable way to think about national identities because of the way that the media depicted the report. For ‘several days’ after the report was published, its claims about why cultural minorities should also be seen as ‘British’ were distorted by journalists who claimed, for example, that the report said ‘being British’ is racist (Mclaughlin and Neal, 2004; Modood, 2014: 24). Such ‘damning headlines’ did not prevent some of the report's ideas being used by various politicians (Modood, 2014: 25, 32; Uberoi and Modood, 2013a: 135–36). But scholars who remember these headlines may think that the report is unlikely to reflect a valuable way to think about national identities, yet I will show that it does, as it reflects Parekh's.
Parekh's (1974a, 1978) texts relating to national identities began to appear in the 1970s when membership of the European Economic Community, mass immigration and Scottish and Welsh nationalism led him to ask who ‘the British’ were any longer. Parekh's texts relating to national identities continued (Parekh, 1986, 1994, 1995a, 2000a, 2009). But his work is not discussed by prominent scholars who debate the value of national identities (Abizadeh, 2002; Mason, 2000, 2012; Miller, 1995, 2000). These scholars may assume that as Parekh devotes limited attention to national identities in well-known books like
This is because Parekh's work on the nature and worth of national identities since the 1970s can be found in his less well-known book chapters, review articles, and published lectures. These pieces are not like peer reviewed journal articles as they contain ideas and arguments that Parekh was ‘trying out’ and that provoke thought but are, at times, unclear. The relevant texts by Parekh thus require some interpretation to clarify the nature and significance of the ideas and arguments in them or there is a danger that these ideas and arguments will just be ignored or deemed implausible. I will clarify some of Parekh's ideas and arguments using my own terms, examples and ideas just as Parekh (1982: ii) explicitly does with other thinkers and others scholars (Cohen, 1978) do too. I will focus primarily on texts that Parekh wrote prior to the CMEB's report to show that the report reflects how Parekh had long discussed the nature and worth of national identities while avoiding the difficulties that other prominent thinkers encounter when they discuss the nature and worth of national identities.
These other prominent thinkers are
Each of these nationalist thinkers has different presuppositions, philosophical approaches, arguments and, thus, political positions. But each of them refers to themselves as a conservative or a liberal and these traditions of thought shape how they think about ideas of nationhood like nations and nationalism. For example, the Burkean idea of polities being a ‘partnership’ (Burke, 1996: 572) between the living, the dead and the unborn, shapes how a conservative such as Scruton (1990: 305; 2014: 82) understands what nations are as he depicts them as those sharing not only descent but a culture bequeathed from one generation to the next. Likewise, the liberal ideal that comes from Immanuel Kant (1929: 335), J. S. Mill (1991: 65) and others of an individual choosing his life ‘plan for himself’ makes Ernest Renan's (2001: 175, emphasis added) idea of nations constituted by ‘
As conservative nationalists think nations share descent and a single common culture they unsurprisingly do not claim cultural diversity, intercultural dialogue or policies of multiculturalism are valuable (Scruton, 1990: 305; 2014: 83). But some well-known liberal nationalists note the value of cultural diversity, elegantly advocate policies of multiculturalism and are seen as ‘multiculturalists’ too (Kymlicka, 1995: 113; 2001a: 54--58) while other liberal nationalists are not (Miller, 1995: 149, 154). Yet I will show that the CMEB' report avoided the questionable ways in which all such conservative and liberal nationalists discuss national identities yet it reflected Parekh's distinct and valuable way of doing so. And I take two steps to achieve this.
First, I will show that the way in which the CMEB's report discusses the nature and worth of national identities differs to how conservative and liberal nationalists do. Second, I show how the report's discussion of national identities reflects Parekh's work which also helps to illuminate why these nationalist thinkers discuss the nature and worth of national identities in questionable ways. I conclude by discussing why scholars and British politicians can use the ways in which Parekh and the CMEB advocate national identities.
The CMEB's report
In the report, people’s ‘sense of national identity’ was said to entail mental images or understandings of what Britain is (CMEB, 2000: 15–16). Such understandings of Britain were disturbed after the second world-war as Britain's imperial, military and economic might disappeared and membership of the European Economic Community, mass immigration and devolution appeared (CMEB, 2000: 22–26). The CMEB said that Britain can respond by trying ‘to turn the clock back … digging in, defending … old values … or…it’ can try to ‘create more … inclusive’ and ‘cosmopolitan’ images of itself. The report endorses creating such inclusive and cosmopolitan images of Britain as ‘one nation’. But this ‘nation’ is not described as conservative and liberal nationalists might describe a ‘nation’ (CMEB, 2000: 15, 22, 103).
This more inclusive and cosmopolitan nation is thus not, as conservative nationalists claim, a ‘natural’ ‘organism’ whose members share descent and fate and are of the same ‘kind’ (Scruton, 1990: 314, 317; 2001: 11; 2006: 27). This is neither inclusive nor cosmopolitan and the CMEB were also not discussing a nation as a liberal nationalist might. Liberal nationalists, we saw, follow Renan (2001: 166) and claim members of a nation share a belief that they want to live a ‘collective life’ and they suggest that ‘forgetting’ divisive episodes in their history can aid this (Kymlicka, 1995: 189; Miller, 1995: 22–25; Tamir, 1993: 67). Yet for the CMEB, divisive historical episodes about, for example, discrimination or Empire often cannot just be forgotten by minorities and British people must tell ‘truths’ about these episodes (CMEB, 2000: 103). Likewise, unlike conservative and liberal nationalists, the report, at times, also referred to Britain as a ‘state’ and a ‘
The CMEB also claimed that people's national identities had value for two reasons. First, when British people have such understandings of Britain, they have understandings of ‘a social unity’ or a collective they are part of and this helps them to conceive collective challenges, goals and interests with others in this collective called Britain (CMEB, 2000: ix, 16). But such understandings of Britain often exclude racial, cultural and religious minorities and can help to cultivate fear of minorities and discrimination against them too (CMEB, 2000: 16). Yet, if British people had ‘mental images’ of Britain that include minorities, this would help to normalise minorities in Britain and reduce fear of them and discrimination against them which is then a second reason to value national identities.
Such mental images of Britain are thus not said to be valuable because they are what conservative nationalists call an ‘eternal’ understanding of the nation – one that is the same for current members as it was for their ancestors and will be for their children (Scruton, 1990: 306). Indeed, the report suggests, as we saw, how such understandings should change. Likewise, the CMEB do not suggest that national identities are valuable because they convey ‘life's meaning’ (Scruton, 1990: 310). National identities are not said to make sense of life, or reconcile a person to the world in Hegel's famous sense. Likewise, the report does not suggest, as liberal nationalists can, that our national identities aid our ability to make choices (Miller, 2009: 535). But like liberal nationalists, national identities are said in the report to help people to see themselves as a ‘community’. Yet this community is not necessarily one of ‘solidarity’, ‘obligation’ and ‘trust’ that people willingly redistribute their income in perhaps because not all communities are like this (Miller, 1995: 83, 91; 2013: 158; Tamir, 1993: 110).
Yet, not all understandings of Britain necessarily include minorities either and the CMEB wanted this to occur, thus the CMEB also discussed ‘re-imagining’ understandings of Britain so that these understandings come, over time, to include minorities. This might occur through at least four means. First, public disputes and controversies such as the ‘Rushdie Affair’ force people to think about Britain's multicultural nature which is a necessary step if their views of it are to include different cultural minorities (CMEB, 2000: 52). Second, policies of multiculturalism like Britain declaring itself multicultural, as Canada did, or teaching children about Britain's multicultural nature can be used to legitimise and promote understandings of Britain that include different cultural minorities (CMEB, 2000: xviii, 276). Third, perhaps through publicly funded education and the arts, British people must tell ‘the truth’ about episodes of discrimination and Empire as doing so reveals the implications of seeing British people as solely white and superior to others. Fourth, again using perhaps publicly funded education and the arts, British people must portray how different regional, religious, cultural and other communities exist and often understand Britain differently. Thus, we might say there are ‘several’ understandings of Britain all of which must come to include minorities (CMEB, 2000: 103).
Where conservative nationalists think national identities cannot be remade as they are natural and can be conserved or can die (Scruton, 1990: 305–306; 2001: 244), clearly the CMEB disagreed as it discussed national identities becoming more inclusive. The latter is something that liberal nationalists discuss too yet only some of them
The report's Parekhian approach to national identities
Parekh (1974b: 230; 1989: 74–75; 2008: 56) often discusses national identities in two ways. First, he discusses them as the identity of a political community and thus for example, Britain, France, Canada or America's identity and second as an identity that a person might exhibit when they say they feel ‘British’, ‘French’, ‘Canadian’ or ‘American’. We often think and talk about national identities in both ways yet conservative and liberal nationalists do not distinguish between them. Nor did the report, but it discussed national identities in both ways.
The report thus discussed understandings of what Britain is and in doing so was referring to a political community's identity. A political community is seen by Parekh as ‘a territorially concentrated group of people’ who accept ‘a common mode of conducting their collective affairs’ which often includes a common language, institutions, values, norms, procedures and so on (Parekh, 1994: 501; 1996: 263; 2000a: 181–184). Understandings of what a political community is thus often focus on a territorially concentrated group of people and refer to their history, race, language, their political ideals, values, norms, institutions, the traditions of thought and behaviour that they use to conduct their collective affairs and so on. But understandings of what a political community is can be held by non-members, thus De-Tocqueville offered an understanding of America and Rousseau had one when writing about Poland.
Yet, the report said members of a political community have such understandings themselves and publicly funded education can help to provide these understandings. Thus children can be taught in schools about the language, norms, values, ideals, traditions of behaviour, history and so on of their political community. But such understandings of a political community often remain vague and thus politicians, historians, philosophers and other intellectuals often try to clarify them. Such people interpret and relate their political community's ideals, procedures, history and so on in different ways according to their own experiences, religious, political and other views. Other members of a political community repeat the different understandings of their political community offered in schools or by politicians or by intellectuals while also interpreting and relating its features in their own different ways too. Thus a political community comes to be understood by its members in a range of different ways hence
However, the report, we saw, also referred to people's senses of national identity and thus them feeling, for example, British, French, American and Canadian and so on. When a person feels this way, they feel their political community shapes what they are and thus they may also say that they
Such an identity does not depict what a person is as a whole, but part of what they are, just as their sexual or religious identities might. Such identities usually only refer to parts of us that help to make us the person we are, like being ‘a man’, ‘a Muslim’ or ‘an artist’. Thus, it is strange for a person to say they have an identity as a ‘reading group member’ or a ‘commuter’ as it is unlikely that these aspects of them make them who they are. But it is not strange for an immigrant to say they have become more British, French, Canadian and American and so on when they sense how their new political community has come to shape them. But such a person must have some, albeit usually vague, understanding of their political community, or they cannot identify it as being something that shapes them. Thus those who say that they feel British, French, Canadian, American and so on must have some, albeit usually vague, understanding of Britain, France, Canada or America and the two ways in which we usually think and talk about national identities are not unrelated. Unsurprisingly, therefore, the CMEB's report said, as we saw, that a person's sense of national identity entails an understanding of what their political community is.
The report also reflected Parekh's scepticism about whether political communities need to be understood as being relatively culturally uniform and thus being what we often call ‘nations’. 6 Few political communities are that culturally uniform and those that were have altered and thus become what Habermas (1998: 119) calls ‘post-national’. We saw how the report described Britain as a ‘post-nation’, but so did Parekh (2001b: 695) who refers to Habermas when saying this. Indeed, the report's hesitancy to describe Britain as a nation reflects Parekh's (1995a: 38; 2001b: 695; 2005: 76). He suggested that Britain is a political community that is too culturally diverse to be a nation. But as many in Britain have long been shaped by its legal and political institutions, it is unsurprising that so many also see themselves, in part, as British. This suggests how people in a political community like Britain can have national identities and see themselves ‘British’, but without being part of a nation called Britain (Parekh, 1995b: 255–256).
Parekh said little about what this means for how we conceive of England, Scotland and Wales, but they
Conservative nationalists are unlikely to challenge Parekh's claim that nations are relatively culturally uniform as they say the same (Scruton, 1990: 315; 2014: 82). But the claims of liberal nationalists suggest that they might think about nations differently. Liberal nationalists might thus question the idea that what we often call nations are relatively culturally uniform by saying instead that nations are people who merely share a territory, history, a willingness to live a collective life and language, norms, beliefs and institutions that are used to govern it (Kymlicka, 2002: 265; Miller, 1995: 22–27; 2000: 27–31). But this seems like a description of a political community in general that could easily refer to the Athenian
They might claim that nations need only be culturally uniform at the ‘public’ level in the sense of a language, norms, values, beliefs and institutions regulating the collective affairs of a citizenry (Kymlicka, 2001a: 55–56; Miller, 1995: 26). Such a ‘public culture’ originates from a cultural group but leaves space for norms, beliefs, traditions of other cultural groups including minority ones who over time can shape a ‘public culture’ too (Kymlicka, 1995: 88–89; 2001b: 56–57; Miller, 1995: 25–26; 2008: 388). And describing a nation as relatively culturally uniform hides how ‘thin’ and thus accommodating a nation's culture can and should be. But while it is difficult to deny that some political communities, like America and Canada, have ‘thin’ and accommodating public cultures, it remains unclear whether we do, and should, think of these political communities as ‘nations’, and there is also another problem.
It is unclear how the cultures that liberal nationalists discuss can be both ‘thin’ and offer what they call ‘meaningful ways of life across the full range of human activities .… encompassing both public and private spheres’ (Kymlicka, 1995: 76). For some liberal nationalists, such cultures are ‘the defining feature of nations’ and as they refer to them as ‘pervasive cultures’ and ‘encompassing cultures’ it is unclear why they are also ‘thin’ (Kymlicka, 1995: 80). It is also unclear why the beliefs, norms and so on of such a ‘thin’ culture are sufficient to make what liberal nationalists call ‘meaningful individual choice(s)’ (Kymlicka, 1995: 84). Some choices may be deeply personal and cultures must be ‘comprehensive enough to provide the full range of choice’ (Miller, 2009: 535; 1995: 26, 42). Likewise, if the cultures that nations do or should have are so accommodating, it is unclear why all prominent liberal nationalists claim that immigration, in large numbers, threatens such cultures (Kymlicka, 2001b: 219; Miller, 2005: 199; Tamir, 1993: 127). Such cultures change anyway, but liberal nationalists claim a nation should be able to ‘control’ how its culture changes and preference should be given to potential immigrants ‘whose cultural values are closer to those of the existing population’ (Miller, 2005: 200, 204; 2015: 10; Tamir, 1993: 127). These claims suggest that liberal nationalists are not always thinking about ‘thin’ and accommodating cultures and often have ‘thick’ and somewhat unaccommodating cultures in mind. Despite their claims then, liberal nationalists do not always themselves think that a nation's culture can and should be `thin' and accommodating thus it is unclear why we should think this either.
But liberal nationalists might instead query how Parekh (1995: 255–56) can conceive of national identities without nations. Liberal nationalists may note that something must make an identity ‘national’ and this is surely a nation which is seemingly why liberal nationalists also often clarify what national identities are by first defining and defending what nations are (Kymlicka, 2002: 265; Miller, 1995: 18; Soutphommasane, 2012: 71). But ‘national’ need not imply a nation when we refer to ‘national negotiations’ over a trade treaty or a ‘national representative’ like a Prime Minister. In such examples, ‘national’ can merely imply a political community and the same is true with what we usually call ‘national identities’. This is why we can disagree about whether America, Canada and Britain are nations,
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but this does not deter discussions about America, Canada and Britain's identity or people's American, Canadian and British identities. When referring to
Yet, Parekh (1974b: 230) also saw how understandings of a political community often focus on the ethnic and cultural characteristics of an ethnic and cultural majority. Ethnic or cultural minorities are thus seen as outsiders even though they are often citizens. This exacerbates the exclusion and discrimination of minorities who can also come to feel that they could never be seen as part of such a political community. Thus, at the time of the report's publication, Parekh (2000a: 231) argued that understandings of a political community should not be ‘ethno-cultural’ as the political community easily becomes understood as ethno-culturally uniform, and ethno-cultural minorities are thus excluded from such understandings. But opposing an
Hence, Parekh (2000a: 231) claimed, at the time of the report, that people's understandings of their political community must be solely ‘politico-institutional’. Such understandings could, for example, focus on a constitution and a bill of rights as this occurs in America and does not exclude ethno-cultural minorities. But Tariq Modood (2001: 249), who was otherwise sympathetic to Parekh's ideas, noted that understandings of a political community that are not ‘ethno-cultural’ and solely ‘politico-institutional’ cannot include ethno-cultural minorities
But Parekh (2008: 57) also argued that national identities were valuable for people individually and for their political communities too. Individually, these identities depict, as we saw earlier, part of what makes a person who they are. And a person acknowledging they are, for example, ‘American’ aids their self-understanding. Indeed, even someone who sees himself as a citizen or a worker of the world will overtime usually be shaped by their political community's legal, political and educational institutions and will thus often have something, for example, ‘British’, ‘French', ‘American’, ‘Canadian’ and so on about them.
The value of national identities for a political community stems from how its members must, from time to time, conceive collective goals and challenges that they will meet together (Parekh, 2000a: 196). To conduct such activity, it helps if members of a political community think of themselves,
Likewise, many in a political community will sense they are shaped by it as its legal, political and educational institutions seldom focus on just a few of them. Many in a political community will thus say, for example, that they are ‘British, ‘French’, ‘American’, ‘Canadian’ and so on, and cannot do so without some, usually vague, understanding of what Britain, France, America and Canada are. Many thus also have understandings of their political community, but Parekh notes how many often also understand it to be solely ‘white’ and ‘Christian’ and this helps to generate fear of racial, religious and other minorities, their exclusion and discrimination too. Thus, Parekh (1974b: 230; 1994: 502) noted, again as the CMEB's report later would, that people must alter their understandings of their political communities to include minorities as this could help to remove a source of discrimination and exclusion against minorities.
Parekh had thus long promoted the measures that the report discussed to encourage people's understandings of their political community to include minorities. He thus noted how public controversies like the Rushdie Affair alert people to how their understanding of their political community is exclusive as minorities show why they are citizens and entitled to request changes (Parekh, 1990: 1, 70). Equally, Parekh (1990: 70; 2000a: 229, 235) noted that political communities should declare themselves multicultural as Canada did. Schools should teach children about the political community's multicultural nature as this will help children to develop understandings of it that include minorities. Parekh (1995b: 264) also rejects Renan's advice to forget divisive episodes in the political community's past as these episodes can teach us much about the discrimination and exclusion that follows when popular understandings of a political community suggest it is solely ‘white’, Christian and so on.
The above reasons for national identities being valuable differ to claiming that people's understandings of their nation are valuable for being an ‘eternal’ view of it as, we saw, conservative nationalists suggest. It is not only unclear why something that is eternal is also valuable, but Parekh (1994: 504) also notes how understandings of a political community change and thus understandings of Britain are not today what they were even 50 years ago. Parekh (1999: 308) also rejects the conservative nationalist view that national identities have value by conveying ‘life's meaning’ as it is unclear why, for example, Canada, Britain, France or America's identity or being Canadian, British, French or American would convey this.
But liberal nationalists are right to suggest that choice presupposes something to choose with (Kymlicka, 1989: 166; Miller, 1995: 44). Yet, liberal nationalists, at times, appear to suggest that we choose using our national
Further, for Parekh (1999: 313–314) national identities need not cultivate the ‘solidarity’, ‘obligation’ and ‘trust’ that people require to redistribute their income as liberal nationalists hope (Kymlicka, 1995: 77; Miller, 1995: 83, 91,92; 2013: 90; Tamir, 1993: 110). This is because, whether national identities aid such redistribution is an empirical issue and liberal nationalists accept this thus they subtly show how national identities must be conceived to examine this empirical issue (Miller and Ali, 2014). But liberal nationalists do
These arguments from conservative and liberal nationalists are questionable and Parekh argues for the value of national identities in ways that seem less so. But Parekh is not a nationalist in the sense that I referred to earlier. Parekh does not discuss the importance of nations or the importance of nations having ‘self-rule’ or constituting states as, for example, Scottish and Welsh nationalists might. Parekh thus does not advocate the nationalism (Kedourie, 1998: 67; Smith, 2002: 9; Gellner, 1983: 1) that we often think is necessary to call someone a nationalist. But Parekh was also not unconcerned with the goals of those seeking secession, independence or greater ‘autonomy’ in a more federal political structure. He thought that such groups or communities need not always be nations, that in some cases arguments can be offered not to secede and that nationalism was not the only way to think about their goals. But Parekh (1990: 191; 2011: 33–35) showed why rectifying previous injustice, preventing further abuse, the need for `recognition' and better representation could all be used in different ways to plausibly justify the goals of such groups and why counter-arguments were often implausible too. In this way, Parekh and the CMEB's report
Conclusion
This article has shown that the CMEB's report reflected Parekh's distinct and valuable way of thinking about national identities which has previously gone unnoticed. Parekh thus does not assume that explaining what national identities are requires us to explain what nations are, but it involves discussing at least two ways in which we often think about national identities, as for example, America's identity, and being American. Parekh also shows why national identities are valuable but
But much can be gained from studying the ways in which a ‘multiculturalist' like Parekh thinks about the nature and worth of national identities. For example, liberal nationalists depict what national identities are and why they have value, as does Parekh, but he avoids some of their more questionable arguments. Liberal nationalists may thus benefit from expanding upon Parekh's work to address the relationships between national identities, citizenship, what rights immigrants who are not yet citizens are entitled to and so on (Miller, 2005; 2007). Parekh and other ‘multiculturalists’ say surprisingly little about these issues. But as national identities are central to what liberal nationalists say about them, clearer notions of what national identities are and why they are important are needed, and Parekh may help to provide them.
Parekh's work may also be important for those who seek to escape the need for national identities by arguing that citizens only need to ‘possess a sense belonging to a polity’ in the sense that they ‘identify with it’ and see it as theirs (Mason, 2000: 127; 2012: 181). This is because a citizen sensing he belongs to a polity, and for example, belongs to America, presupposes he has at least some, albeit usually vague, understanding of America which is one way in which Parekh describes national identities. And if citizens should ‘identify’ with their polity and see it as theirs, this might occur if they think their polity helps to shape what they are, and makes them, for example, British, French, Canadian, American and so on which is the second way in which Parekh describes national identities. Neither of the ways in which we usually think and talk about national identities seems easy to escape. Similarly, those who criticise liberal nationalists and who endorse ‘post-national’ or ‘post-nationalist' political communities may benefit from Parekh's work (Azibedeh, 2002: 495; Müller, 2007: 63). This is because, like them, Parekh accepts that political communities are often no longer nations and he does not advocate nationalism or being a nationalist. But Parekh does not take the step of rejecting national identities as he recognises why what we usually call national identities need not be as connected to nations and nationalism as some think.
Likewise, British politicians can make use of the report and Parekh's way of thinking about the nature and worth of national identities. This is because few senior British politicians today would echo John Major (1993) and talk about Britain remaining ‘unamendable in all of its essentials’. And many senior British politicians already discuss promoting more inclusive understandings of Britain as Tariq Modood and I show elsewhere (Modood, 2014: 31; Uberoi and Modood, 2013a, 2013b). Liberal nationalist reasons can be used to justify this as some public intellectuals suggest, and this may accord with the ‘muscular forms of liberalism’ that some British politicians discuss too (Goodhart, 2013: 285). But if British politicians use liberal nationalists reasons to justify promoting more inclusive understandings of Britain, it is unclear how they avoid the questionable arguments that we saw liberal nationalists can make. The CMEB report and ‘multiculturalists’ like Parekh thus offer British politicians another way to justify the importance of understandings of Britain being more inclusive. There is then some scholarly and non-scholarly value in the way that ‘multiculturalists’ advocate national identities and more research into the many different ways in which different ‘multiculturalists’ (Modood, 2013; Uberoi, 2007) do so is needed.
