Contested Taiwan
Sovereignty, Social Movements, and Party Formation
Lev Nachman author Madeleine Yue Dong editor William Lavely editor James Lin editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Washington Press
Published:19th Aug '25
Should be back in stock very soon
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£107.95(9780295753911)

Where statehood is contested, questions of identity and territory define the political landscape
Despite maintaining de facto sovereignty, states like Taiwan find themselves unrecognized in today’s international system because another power claims the state as part of their territory. This fraught status, in turn, significantly affects the domestic politics of these places.
Lev Nachman’s exploration of Taiwan’s political landscape after the 2014 Sunflower Movement brings a fresh perspective to understanding social movement mobilization and political party formation in what he terms “contested states.” In these states, political cleavages are defined not by traditional left-right issues but by questions of identity, territory, and what to do about the country that claims them. Drawing from 150 interviews with Taiwanese activists and politicians, as well as a comparative analysis of Ukraine, Nachman reveals that traditional political science theories fall short when explaining the formation of movement parties in such contexts. Instead, he argues, looming existential threats and strained relationships between activists and established proindependence parties drive social movements into formal political arenas.
Contested Taiwan offers a new approach to understanding contested statehood, movement party formation, and what motivates individuals to take political action across the world.
"Contested Taiwan unfolds a clear conceptual framework of state contestation and an argument for movement party formation in a contested state . . . undoubtedly an important work for the scholarship of both Taiwan politics and state contestation. Its significance does not end with merely providing a rich but concise empirical account of Taiwan's political configurations. More importantly, by specifying how Taiwan's contested status shapes its domestic politics, Contested Taiwan also demystifies Taiwan's perceived 'uniqueness' in terms of its sovereignty status and situates Taiwan within the scholarship of state contestation—a macro comparative framework where other countries (e.g., Ukraine, Kosovo, Somaliland, etc.) can also be included."
* Asian Studies ReviISBN: 9780295753928
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 479g
226 pages