Kis, JánosKymlicka, WillOpalski, Magda2022-03-2820029780199248155https://doi.org/10.1093/019924815X.003.0011http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14018/1991This paper argues that although the multination state is closer to meeting the standards of ethnocultural justice than the one-nation state, the alternatives to nation-building cannot be neglected. It analyses the claim that if ethnocultural justice requires that the one-nation state give way to the multination state, then ethnocultural justice also requires that exclusive jurisdiction give way to overlapping jurisdictions. It also shows, using the example of recent developments in Hungarian nationalism, that the change in the international environment has impacted the perception of political alternatives.engNation-buildingNation-statesEthnocultural justiceHungaryNationalismNation-building and beyondBook chapterhttps://academic.oup.com/book/9348/chapter/156138161