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QuasiNational

QuasiNational refers to a political classification used in political science to describe an entity or collective that possesses a coherent national identity and aspirations for political sovereignty, but does not meet the criteria of a fully sovereign state under international law. Such entities operate with substantial self-governance and national symbolism while remaining subject to the jurisdiction of one or more parent states.

The term is descriptive rather than legal; it is used to analyze autonomy movements, diasporic communities,

Common characteristics include: a defined national culture or ethnicity, formal or informal institutions of self-government, partial

Real-world analogues are discussed in political science as comparisons: autonomous regions with strong national identities, such

See also: Autonomy, Sovereignty, Nationalism, Self-determination, Unrecognized states.

or
regions
pursuing
self-determination
within
existing
states.
QuasiNational
situations
may
arise
in
federations
where
regional
governments
maintain
their
own
institutions
and
cultures
but
defer
defense
and
foreign
policy
to
the
central
government.
sovereignty
over
internal
matters
(such
as
education,
culture,
or
economic
policy),
reliance
on
a
parent
state
for
foreign
relations
and
defense,
and
contested
legitimacy
or
recognition
in
international
forums.
QuasiNational
arrangements
can
be
transitional,
moving
toward
full
statehood,
or
enduring
without
full
recognition.
as
Scotland
or
Catalonia
within
larger
states,
or
de
facto
self-governing
regions
like
the
Kurdistan
Region
in
Iraq.
Critics
argue
that
the
label
can
obscure
power
imbalances
or
legitimacy
concerns,
while
proponents
see
it
as
a
useful
category
for
understanding
evolving
political
communities.