0 political beliefs and systems that place a lot of importance on the group to which people see themselves as belonging to, especially according to their race, gender (= whether they are male or female), or sexual orientation (= whether they prefer to have sexual relationships with people of the same or a different gender): --
Identity politics, and by extension, conflicts, in this sense, are the outcome of interest politics.
Consequently, the identity politics of the early 1940s has been viewed within the same paradigm as the 'communalism' of the late 1940s.
In this way, recuperative identity politics and the politics of deconstruction need not be mutually exclusive.
In other words, post-modernism in dance is often presented as a variation on the naturalist theme, only steeped in identity politics.
The fear of losing one's faith can be a destructive force in a secularizing world; it can hand over entire communities to venomous identity politics.
The rise of identity politics in the 1970s - feminism (and anti-racism) - meant that for many, the (male) sexuality of rock was reinterpreted as sexism.
Normative theories of multiculturalism, on the other hand, are instructive because they have grappled with the moral commitment of recuperative identity politics.
All of these to a greater or lesser extent are founded upon birth, familial relations, and/or identity politics.