ethnoracialist

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English

Etymology

From ethnoracial +‎ -ist or ethno- +‎ racialist.

Adjective

ethnoracialist

  1. Pertaining to, exhibiting, or in accordance with ethnoracialism.
    • 2004, Taha Parla, Andrew Davison, Corporatist Ideology In Kemalist Turkey: Progress Or Order?, Syracuse University Press, →ISBN, page 75:
      Discernable in these characteristics is a tendency in Kemal's spoken discourse to use terms of an ethnoracialist nationalism alongside terms of a civil or civic nationalism. The effect is that the latter take on hues of the former.
    • 2009, Bruce David Baum, Racially writing the republic: racists, race rebels, and transformations of American identity, Duke University Press Books:
      [...] that could eradicate the alleged evils of modernity: corruption, materialism, promiscuity, and racial mixing. Many individuals and groups in the United States subscribed to such ethnoracialist notions, the Ku Klux Klan being the best known.
    • 2016, Katherine Sorrels, Cosmopolitan Outsiders: Imperial Inclusion, National Exclusion, and the Pan-European Idea, 1900-1930, Springer, →ISBN:
      The second is that if evolutionism is taken as evidence of a thinly veiled militarist and ethnoracialist agenda, most figures instrumental in the early twentieth-century peace movement do not qualify as pacifists.
    • 2018, Jens Rydgren, The Oxford Handbook of the Radical Right, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 288:
      Attracted to Holocaust denial and readier to admire Nazism and fascism, the European New Right is more völkisch (ethnoracialist). Whereas the American New Right, which tends to be libertarian, decries the power of the state, ...