“Against those who argue that socialist theorists have historically underestimated nationalism and hence its place in the politics of nation building, Forman skillfully interprets the ideas of the most famous thinkers of the international labor movement to reveal that these theorists did indeed take the concepts of nation and nationalism seriously, and that within their writings one can end the theoretical basis for a new, reinvigorated international labor movement. As such, Nationalism and the International Labor Movement represents not only an important and innovative contribution to the literature on nations and nation building but an effective effort to communicate the principles and language of a new cosmopolitan vision of a future where social and economic justice and institutional accountability can finally be realized on a global scale.”
—Mark Gobeyn, New Political Science