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  1. In an 1858 speech, future President Abraham Lincoln alluded to a form of American civic nationalism originating from the tenets of the Declaration of Independence as a force for national unity in the United States, stating that it was a method for uniting diverse peoples of different ethnic ancestries into a common nationality:

  2. Civic-national ideals influenced the development of representative democracy in countries such as the United States and France (see the United States Declaration of Independence of 1776, and the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen of 1789).

  3. If one considers that the United States of America is a civic nation, a social contract in which members of the republic share political ideals and obey the same laws, then being or becoming an American is a function of becoming a member of a political union.

  4. Civic nationalism is a form of nationalism that emphasizes shared citizenship, legal equality, and allegiance to the nation-state, rather than ethnic or cultural identity. This concept promotes the idea that a nation is defined by its political principles and the rights of individuals rather than by common ancestry or heritage.

  5. Apr 24, 2008 · one of the first nation-states in the world, and one primarily founded on civic ideals rather than homogenous heritage 2 , the U.S. presents a fascinating case for the study of the emergence and development of national attachment, the use of nationalist ideology in

  6. Oct 5, 2022 · In early America, and as it developed through the ensuing centuries, nationalism in the “New World” was always “intellectual.” “In its very origins as a nation,” Kohn relates, “the United States was the embodiment of an idea, not an ideology but to be one.

  7. The passage of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution following the victory of Union forces in the Civil War (1861–1865), defined American citizenship for the first time, but the ethnic reality behind the nation’s civic ideal constrained the extent to which American nationalism in the later nineteenth-century moved beyond its ...