‘Green offers a novel theory of the role industrialization plays in re-shaping ethnic landscapes, highlighting the transformative effects of increases in the value of labour relative to land. He provides compelling quantitative and qualitative evidence from a wide range of country cases, and levels a powerful challenge to prevailing accounts.’
Evan Lieberman - Professor of Political Science and Total Chair on Contemporary Africa, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
‘Green’s brilliant new study of how ethnicity changes in response to industrialization offers hope and a deeper understanding of how ethnic identities evolve. Green shows how breaking free from agricultural life also breaks the hold of local ethnic identities; at the same time, he shows how ‘top-down’ efforts by states to reshape or assimilate their people are generally ineffective or even counter-productive. Using historical studies, cross-national data analysis, and impressive fieldwork, this wide-ranging yet detailed analysis provides convincing evidence that ethnicity is not fixed, but responds to social change.’
Jack A. Goldstone - Hazel Chair in Public Policy, George Mason University
‘Green takes on big questions about how the structural transformation of the political economy shapes the nature of ethnic identity. This book is terrifically ambitious in theoretical and empirical scope, engaging with a wide range of distinctive empirical cases in both the Global North and Global South. It makes us reconsider how we study the politics of ethnic change in the social sciences.’
Lauren M. MacLean - Arthur F. Bentley Chair of Political Science, Indiana University-Bloomington
‘The book’s empirical scope is impressive …’
Jens Schneider
Source: Ethnic and Racial Studies
‘This is a remarkable piece of scholarship, with grand ambition and scope. It accomplishes the task of testing arguments in a wide variety of settings, with varied data, emphasising the value of comparative analysis. This is bold and admirable work, which deserves to be read widely.’
Dominika Koter
Source: The Journal of Development Studies