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Ghost Nations: The People Who've Lost a Country but Not an Identity

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Ghost The People Who've Lost a Country but Not an Identity

By George Blacksmith



Across the modern world, millions belong to nations that officially do not exist. Ghost Nations is an investigative and deeply human exploration of the peoples who have lost their countries but not their identity - Kurds, Palestinians, Pashtuns, Taiwanese, Tibetans, Sahrawis, Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, and others whose lives unfold in the space between history and recognition.



Drawing on global reportage, anthropology, and cultural history, George Blacksmith reveals how stateless nations form, survive, and redefine themselves without sovereignty. From refugee camps and borderlands to parliaments-in-exile and digital diasporas, the book uncovers the emotional, political, and philosophical realities of belonging when the world refuses to acknowledge your homeland.



Why do some nations endure without borders? What makes identity persist even after territory, citizenship, or international recognition disappears? And what does their struggle reveal about the fragility of the modern nation-state?



Moving through case studies - Kurdistan, Palestine, Taiwan, Tibet, Western Sahara, Artsakh, and more - Ghost Nations exposes the ethics and contradictions of recognition, the legacy of colonial borders, and the powerful stories that keep these communities alive.



Ultimately, it asks a provocative Is a nation still a nation without land - or is identity the last true form of sovereignty?



A sweeping, empathetic, and timely work for readers of Prisoners of Geography, The Silk Roads, The Origins of Nations, and Sapiens.

306 pages, Kindle Edition

Published December 10, 2025

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