This article is about the nationalist movement which asserts that the Taiwanese people are a nation distinct from the Chinese people. For Chinese nationalism in Taiwan, see Chinese nationalism § In Taiwan.
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Taiwanese nationalism" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR(October 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Politics of Taiwan
Government
Constitution
Additional Articles of the Constitution
Freedom of religion (Article 13)
Law
Taxation
Presidency
President of the Republic of China
Tsai Ing-wen / Lai Ching-te (elect) (DPP) Vice President-elect of the Republic of China
Lai Ching-te / Hsiao Bi-khim (elect) (DPP)
Office of the President
National Security Council
Executive
Executive Yuan
Premier
Chen Chien-jen (DPP) Vice Premier
Cheng Wen-tsan (DPP)
Legislature
11th Legislative Yuan Legislative Yuan President of the Legislative Yuan
Han Kuo-yu (KMT) Vice President of the Legislative Yuan
Johnny Chiang (KMT)
National Assembly (defunct) Control Yuan (chamber defunct)
Judiciary
Judicial Yuan
President of the Judicial Yuan and Chief Justice
Hsu Tzong-li Vice President of the Judicial Yuan
Tsai Jeong-duen
Supreme Court
High Courts
District Courts
Other branches
Examination Yuan
President of the Examination Yuan
Huang Jong-tsun Vice President of the Examination Yuan
Chou Hung-hsien
Control Yuan President of the Control Yuan
Chen Chu Vice President of the Control Yuan
Lee Hung-chun
Local government
Mayors and Magistrates
Elections
Central Election Commission
Presidential elections
Legislative elections
Local elections
Referendums
Political parties
Represented in the Legislative Yuan
Kuomintang
Democratic Progressive Party
Taiwan People's Party
Others
New Power Party
Taiwan Statebuilding Party
People First Party
Taiwan Solidarity Union
New Party
Non-Partisan Solidarity Union
Green Party Taiwan
Mass media
Television
Newspapers United Daily News Liberty Times China Times
Propaganda Censorship
Film censorship
White Terror
Foreign relations
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Foreign Minister
Joseph Wu
Cross-Strait relations
Special state-to-state relations
One Country on Each Side
1992 Consensus
Taiwan consensus
Chinese Taipei
Republic of China (1912–1949)
Chinese Civil War
One-China policy
China and the United Nations
Chinese unification
Taiwan independence movement
Taiwanese nationalism
Tangwai movement
Third Taiwan Strait Crisis
Taiwan portal
Other countries
v
t
e
Part of a series on
Taiwan independence movement
Basis
Anti-imperialism
De-Sinicization
Self-determination
Formosa
Historical point of view of Taiwan [zh]
Progressivism
State normalization [zh]
Taiwan Name Rectification Campaign
Taiwan subjectivity [zh]
Formosan
Taiwanese nationalism
Left-wing
Taiwanization
Branch
Taiwan independence
Republic of China independence
Independent Taiwan [zh]
Theory
1996 consensus [zh]
Four-Stage Theory
Four Wants and One Without
One Country on Each Side
Republic of China is Taiwan [zh]
Republic of China on Taiwan
Second Republic of the Republic of China [zh]
Special state-to-state relations [zh]
Taiwan consensus
Theory of the Undetermined Status of Taiwan
Two Chinas
Two Sides, Two Constitutions [zh]
Document
A Declaration of Formosan Self-salvation [zh]
The Programme of New Generation [zh]
Resolution on Taiwan's Future
Taiwan Independence Clause [zh]
Treaty of San Francisco
History
Kingdom of Middag
Kingdom of Tungning
Republic of Formosa
Incident
2008 Taiwanese United Nations membership referendum
Additional Articles of the Constitution
Anti-Black Box Curriculum Movement
Article 100 of the Criminal Code [zh]
Attempted Assassination of Chiang Ching-kuo [zh]
The Case of Scheming for Taiwan Independence [zh]
The Case of Taiwan Independence Association [zh]
The Case of Su Tong-ch'i [zh]
Chen Wen-chen Incident [zh]
February 28 Incident
Fully election and recall of legislators [zh]
Formosa Incident
Guanziling Conference [zh]
The Murder of the Lin Family [zh]
Petition Movement for the Establishment of a Taiwanese Parliament
Presidential elections in Taiwan
1996
Qiandao Lake Incident
The self-immolation of Cheng Nan-jung
Sunflower Student Movement
Taiwan Passport Sticker
Taiyuan Incident
Third Taiwan Strait Crisis
Tiananmen Square protests of 1989
White Terror
Wild Lily student movement
Zhongli incident
Policy
Abrogation of Guidelines for National Unification
Abolition of National Unification Council
No haste, Be patient [zh]
Referendum Act
Streamlining of Taiwan Province [zh]
Parties
Democratic Progressive Party
New Power Party
Taiwan Independence Party
Taiwan Revolutionary Party
Taiwan Statebuilding Party
Taiwan Solidarity Union
Alliances
Pan-Green Coalition
Formosa Alliance
Organization
Formosan League for Reemancipation
Liberty Times
One Side One Country Alliance [zh]
Provisional Government [zh]
Taiwanese Cultural Association
World United Formosans for Independence
Figure
Chai
Chang
Chen (Chih-hsiung)
Chen (Lung-chu) [zh]
Chen (Nan-tien) [zh]
Chen (Shui-bian)
Cheng
Chiang [zh]
Huang
Kin
Ko [zh]
Koh
Koo
Lai
Lee (Chen-Yuan)
Lee (Teng-hui)
Lee (Ying-yuan)
Liao (Joshua) [zh]
Liao (Shih-hau) [zh]
Liao (Wen-i)
Lin (Freddy)
Lin (Fei-fan)
Lo [zh]
Lu
Ng
Peng
Su (Beng)
Su (Tong-ch'i) [zh]
Tsai
Tsay
Movement
228 Hand-in-Hand rally
Taiwan Consciousness Debate [zh]
Related topics
Benshengren
Chinese imperialism
Mutual Defense Treaty
Opinion polling on Taiwanese identity
Political status of Taiwan
Proposed flags of Taiwan
Taiwan independence activists
Taiwan Relations Act
Taiwan the Formosa
Taiwanese indigenous peoples
Taiwan portal
v
t
e
Taiwanese nationalism (Chinese: 臺灣民族主義 or 台灣民族主義; pinyin: Táiwān mínzú zhǔyì; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Tâi-oân Bîn-cho̍k Chú-gī) is a nationalist movement which asserts that the Taiwanese people are a distinct nation. Due to the complex political status of Taiwan, it is strongly linked to the Taiwan independence movement in seeking an identity separate from China. This involves the education of history, geography, and culture from a Taiwan-centric perspective, promoting native languages of Taiwan such as Taiwanese Hokkien, Hakka, and indigenous languages, as well as reforms in other aspects.
and 24 Related for: Taiwanese nationalism information
Taiwanesenationalism (Chinese: 臺灣民族主義 or 台灣民族主義; pinyin: Táiwān mínzú zhǔyì; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Tâi-oân Bîn-cho̍k Chú-gī) is a nationalist movement which asserts...
Nationalism in Taiwan may refer to the following: Taiwanesenationalism, a form of nationalism asserting Taiwan as an independent Taiwanese nation Chinese...
extent. However, Taiwanese identities were more complicated at the time, with some campaigning for independence based on Taiwanesenationalism, while others...
independence in Shanghai. Taiwanesenationalism / Taiwan independence movement - Taiwanese people. Mainland China sees Taiwan as part of its territory...
independence in Shanghai. Taiwanesenationalism Justin Chun-ting Ho (15 November 2023). "Hong Kong Anti-colonial Nationalism during the Chinese Language...
(DPP), defended Taiwanese-based "liberal [ethnic] nationalism" (自由民族主義). South Korea prioritized South Korean-based "state nationalism" (국가주의) over Korean...
The Taiwan independence movement is a political movement which advocates the formal declaration of an independent and sovereign Taiwanese state, as opposed...
encourage Taiwanese businesses to invest in mainland China and aiming to create a pro-Beijing bloc within the Taiwanese electorate. Within Taiwan, unification...
and Taiwanese nationalists who are critical of Chinese nationalism are especially critical of Chinese state nationalism. Chinese ethnic nationalism (Chinese:...
and speak Mandarin, Hokkien, Hakka, or indigenous Taiwanese languages as a mother tongue. Taiwanese people may also refer to the indigenous peoples of...
legislative seats. The Taiwan Solidarity Union (TSU) is a left-wing progressive party characterised primarily by its Taiwanesenationalism and derives its membership...
Taiwanese indigenous peoples, also known as Formosans, Native Taiwanese or Austronesian Taiwanese, and formerly as Taiwanese aborigines or Gaoshan people...
Terror that was initiated by the KMT, as well as the promotion of Taiwanesenationalism and identity. Tsai Ing-wen, who is a three-time chairperson of the...
census in Taiwan. The Taiwanese indigenous languages or Formosan languages are the languages of the Taiwanese indigenous peoples. Taiwanese aborigines...
socio-political experience in Taiwan gradually developed into a sense of Taiwanese cultural identity and a feeling of Taiwanese cultural awareness, which...
Austrian nationalism (Austrian German: Österreichischer Nationalismus) is the nationalism that asserts that Austrians are a nation and promotes the cultural...
2016 saw themselves as Taiwanese, not Chinese, whereas in 1991, this figure was only 13.6%. This radical upswell in Taiwanese national identity has seen...
occupation, the native Taiwanese population consisted of indigenous people, the Hoklo, and the Hakka. Austronesian Taiwanese have lived in Taiwan for nearly 5000...
lǐngdǎorén) and Leader of the Taiwanese Authorities (台灣當局領導人; 台湾当局领导人; Táiwān dāngjú lǐngdǎo rén) to describe Taiwan's head of state. These terms are...
Green Party Taiwan is a political party in Taiwan established on 25 January 1996. Although the party is sympathetic to Taiwanesenationalism and shares...
Taiwanese to become more independence-minded". According to a June 2008 poll from a Taiwanese mainstream media TVBS, 58% of people living in Taiwan favor...
History of Taiwan (1945–present) Political status of Taiwan Politics of the Republic of China President of the Republic of China Taiwanesenationalism...