Consociationalism

Consociationalism (/kənˌsʃiˈʃənəlɪzəm/ kən-SOH-shee-AY-shən-əl-iz-əm) is a form of democratic power sharing.[1] Political scientists define a consociational state as one which has major internal divisions along ethnic, religious, or linguistic lines, but which remains stable due to consultation among the elites of these groups. Consociational states are often contrasted with states with majoritarian electoral systems.

The goals of consociationalism are governmental stability, the survival of the power-sharing arrangements, the survival of democracy, and the avoidance of violence. When consociationalism is organised along religious confessional lines, as in Lebanon, it is known as confessionalism.

Consociationalism is sometimes seen as analogous to corporatism.[2][3] Some scholars consider consociationalism a form of corporatism. Others claim that economic corporatism was designed to regulate class conflict, while consociationalism developed on the basis of reconciling societal fragmentation along ethnic and religious lines.[4]

Concurrent majority can be a precursor to consociationalism. A consociational democracy differs from consensus democracy (e.g. in Switzerland), in that consociational democracy represents a consensus of representatives with minority veto, while consensus democracy requires consensus across the electorate.[5]

The idea has received significant criticism in its applicability to democratic political systems, especially with regard to power-sharing.

Origins

Consociation was first discussed in the 17th century New England Confederation. It described the interassociation and cooperation of the participant self-governing Congregational churches of the various colonial townships of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. These were empowered in the civil legislature and magistracy.[6] It was debated at length in the Boston Synod of 1662.[7] This was when the Episcopalian Act of Uniformity 1662 was being introduced in England.

Consociationalism was originally discussed in academic terms by the political scientist Arend Lijphart. However, Lijphart has stated that he "merely discovered what political practitioners had repeatedly – and independently of both academic experts and one another – invented years earlier".[8] Theoretically, consociationalism was inducted from Lijphart's observations of political accommodation in the Netherlands, after which Lijphart argued for a generalizable consociational approach to ethnic conflict regulation.[9] The Netherlands, as a consociational state, was between 1857 and 1967 divided into four non-territorial pillars: Calvinist, Catholic, socialist, and general, although until 1917 there was a plurality ("first past the post") electoral system rather than a proportional one. In their heyday, each comprised tightly organised groups, schools, universities, hospitals and newspapers, all divided along a Balkanised social structure. The theory, according to Lijphart, focuses on the role of social elites, their agreement and co-operation, as the key to a stable democracy. Based on this initial study of consociational democracy, John McGarry and Brendan O'Leary trace consociationalism back to 1917, when it was first employed in the Netherlands, while Gerhard Lehmbruch suggests 'precursors' of consociationalism as early as the 1555 Peace of Augsburg.[10][11]

State-building

While Lijphart's initial theory drew primarily from Western European democracies in its formulation of consociationalism, it has gained immense traction in post-conflict state-building contexts in the past decades.[12][13] This development has been reflected in the expansion of the favourable conditions to external factors in the literature as well.[14][12][15] Rather than internally constructed by state elites, these recent examples have been characterised by external facilitation, and at times imposition, through international actors.[16][17][12] In the process, consociational arrangements have frequently been used to transform immediate violent conflict and solidify peace settlements in extremely fragile contexts of deeply divided societies.[18] The volatile environments in which these recent examples have been implemented have exhibited the need for external interference not only for their initial implementation but also for their continued existence.[19][12] As such, a range of international actors have assumed mediating and supporting roles to preserve power-sharing agreements in targeted states. Most prominently in Bosnia-Herzegovina, this has involved an "international regulating body" in the form of a High Representative who in one period frequently intervened in the domestic political affairs of the state to implement legislation on which domestic elites were reluctant to come to an agreement on.[20]

While the current results of consociational arrangements implemented in post-conflict state-building endeavours have been mixed, scholars such as O'Leary and McGarry maintain that they have often proven to be the most practical approach to ending immediate conflict and creating the necessary stability for peace-building to take place.[18] Its utility has been seen in its transformative aspect, flexibility, and "realist" approach to existing identity formations that are difficult to incorporate in a majoritarian system.[21]

Characteristics

Lijphart identifies four key characteristics of consociational democracies:[22]

Name Explanation
Grand coalition Elites of each pillar come together to rule in the interests of society because they recognize the dangers of non-cooperation.
Mutual veto Consensus among the groups is required to confirm the majority rule. Mutuality means that the minority is unlikely to successfully block the majority. If one group blocks another on some matter, the latter are likely to block the former in return.
Proportionality Representation is based on population. If one pillar accounts for 30% of the overall society, then they occupy 30% of the positions on the police force, in civil service, and in other national and civic segments of society.
Segmental autonomy Creates a sense of individuality and allows for different culturally-based community laws.

Consociational policies often have these characteristics:[23]

Favourable conditions

Lijphart also identified a number of "favourable conditions" under which consociationalism is likely to be successful. He has changed the specification of these conditions somewhat over time.[24] Michael Kerr summarised Lijphart's most prominent favourable factors as:[25]

  • Segmental isolation of ethnic communities
  • A multiple balance of power
  • The presence of external threats common to all communities
  • Overarching loyalties to the state
  • A tradition of elite accommodation
  • Socioeconomic equality
  • A small population size, reducing the policy load
  • A moderate multi-party system with segmental parties

Lijphart stresses that these conditions are neither indispensable nor sufficient to account for the success of consociationalism.[22] This has led Rinus van Schendelen to conclude that "the conditions may be present and absent, necessary and unnecessary, in short conditions or no conditions at all".[26]

John McGarry and Brendan O'Leary argue that three conditions are key to the establishment of democratic consociational power-sharing: elites have to be motivated to engage in conflict regulation; elites must lead deferential segments; and there must be a multiple balance of power, but more importantly the subcultures must be stable.[27] Michael Kerr, in his study of the role of external actors in power-sharing arrangements in Northern Ireland and Lebanon, adds to McGarry and O'Leary's list the condition that "the existence of positive external regulating pressures, from state to non-state actors, which provide the internal elites with sufficient incentives and motives for their acceptance of, and support for, consociation".[25]

Arguments in favor

In a consociational state, all groups, including minorities, are represented on the political and economic stages. Supporters of the consociationalism argue that it is a more realistic option in deeply divided societies than integrationist approaches to conflict management.[28]

Criticisms

Many criticisms have been levelled against the deployment of consociationalism in state-building. It has been criticised as institutionalising and deepening existing divisions,[29] being severely dependent on external support for survival,[18][12] and temporarily freezing conflicts but not resolving them.[21] Given the apparent necessity for external regulation of these agreements, many scholars have characterised these state-building projects as deeply invasive.[20][30] A recurring concern therein is the erosion of the governing elite's accountability towards its population and the fostering of clientele politics.[20][31][30] These dynamics have been pointed to as obstacles to the resolution of the deep divisions consociations are meant to alleviate.[21][32] Further critiques have pointed out that consociations have at times encouraged conditions of "fragile states", which state-building is meant to prevent.[30]

Brian Barry

Brian Barry has questioned the nature of the divisions that exist in the countries that Lijphart considers to be "classic cases" of consociational democracies. For example, he makes the case that in the Swiss example, "political parties cross-cut cleavages in the society and provide a picture of remarkable consensus rather than highly structured conflict of goals".[33] In the case of the Netherlands, he argues that "the whole cause of the disagreement was the feeling of some Dutchman ... that it mattered what all the inhabitants of the country believed. Demands for policies aimed at producing religious or secular uniformity presuppose a concern ... for the state of grace of one's fellow citizens". He contrasts this to the case of a society marked by conflict, in this case Northern Ireland, where he argues that "the inhabitants ... have never shown much worry about the prospects of the adherents of the other religion going to hell".[34] Barry concludes that in the Dutch case, consociationalism is tautological and argues that "the relevance of the 'consociational' model for other divided societies is much more doubtful than is commonly supposed".[33]

Rinus van Schendelen

Rinus van Schendelen has argued that Lijphart uses evidence selectively. Pillarisation was "seriously weakening", even in the 1950s, cross-denominational co-operation was increasing, and formerly coherent political sub-cultures were dissolving. He argued that elites in the Netherlands were not motivated by preferences derived from the general interest, but rather by self-interest. They formed coalitions not to forge consociational negotiation between segments but to improve their parties' respective power. He argued that the Netherlands was "stable" in that it had few protests or riots, but that it was so before consociationalism, and that it was not stable from the standpoint of government turnover. He questioned the extent to which the Netherlands, or indeed any country labelled a consociational system, could be called a democracy, and whether calling a consociational country a democracy isn't somehow ruled out by definition. He believed that Lijphart suffered severe problems of rigor when identifying whether particular divisions were cleavages, whether particular cleavages were segmental, and whether particular cleavages were cross-cutting.[26]

Lustick on hegemonic control

Ian Lustick has argued that academics lack an alternative "control" approach for explaining stability in deeply divided societies and that this has resulted in the empirical overextension of consociational models.[35] Lustick argues that Lijphart has "an impressionistic methodological posture, flexible rules for coding data, and an indefatigable, rhetorically seductive commitment to promoting consociationalism as a widely applicable principle of political engineering",[36] that results in him applying consociational theory to case studies that it does not fit. Furthermore, Lustick states that "Lijphart's definition of 'accommodation' ... includes the elaborately specified claim that issues dividing polarized blocs are settled by leaders convinced of the need for settlement".[36]

Horowitz and centripetal criticism of consociationalism

Consociationalism focuses on diverging identities such as ethnicity instead of integrating identities such as class, institutionalizing and entrenching the former. Furthermore, it relies on rival co-operation, which is inherently unstable. It focuses on intrastate relations and neglects relations with other states. Donald L. Horowitz argues that consociationalism can lead to the reification of ethnic divisions, since "grand coalitions are unlikely, because of the dynamics of intraethnic competition. The very act of forming a multiethnic coalition generates intraethnic competition – flanking – if it does not already exist".[37]

Consistent with Horowitz's claims, Dawn Brancati finds that federalism/territorial autonomy, an element of consociationalism, strengthens ethnic divisions if it is designed in a way that strengthens regional parties, which in turn encourage ethnic conflict.[38]

James Anderson also supports Horowitz's contention that consociational powersharing built around diverging identities can entrench and sharpen these divisions. Citing the example of Northern Ireland, Anderson argues such approaches tend to "prioritise the same general type of territorial identity as the ethno-nationalists". Nonetheless, Anderson concedes difficulty lies in the fact such identities cannot simply be wished away, as he argues is attempted when focusing only on individual rights at the expense of group rights.[39]

As an alternative of consociationalism Horowitz suggested an alternative model – centripetalism. Centripetalism aims to depoliticize ethnicity and to encourage multi-ethnic parties instead of reinforcing ethnic divides through political institutions.[40]

Other criticisms

In 2022, Yascha Mounk argued that the case for consociationalism and power-sharing had weakened significantly since first proposed based on experiments and real-life observations. He argues that in some cases it can bring short-term peace, but that it is always temporary and is likely to worsen tensions in the long-run.[41]

Critics point out that consociationalism is dangerous in a system of differing antagonistic ideologies, generally conservatism and communism.[citation needed] They state that specific conditions must exist for three or more groups to develop a multi- system with strong leaders. This philosophy is dominated by elites, with those masses that are sidelined with the elites having less to lose if war breaks out. Consociationalism cannot be imperially applied. For example, it does not effectively apply to Austria. Critics also point to the failure of this line of reasoning in Lebanon, a country that reverted to civil war. It only truly applies in Switzerland, Belgium and the Netherlands, and not in more deeply divided societies. If one of three groups gets half plus one of the vote, then the other groups are in perpetual opposition, which is largely incompatible with consociationalism.

Consociationalism assumes that each group is cohesive and has strong leadership. Although the minority can block decisions, this requires 100 per cent agreement. Rights are given to communities rather than individuals, leading to over-representation of some individuals in society and under-representation of others. Grand coalitions are unlikely to happen due to the dynamics of ethnic competition. Each group seeks more power for itself. Consociationalists are criticized for focusing too much on the set up of institutions and not enough on transitional issues which go beyond such institutions. Finally, it is claimed that consociational institutions promote sectarianism and entrench existing identities.

Examples

The political systems of a number of countries operate or used to operate on a consociational basis, including Belgium, Italy, Cyprus (effective 1960–1963),[42][43][44] the First Czechoslovak Republic,[45] Israel, Lebanon, the Netherlands (1917–1967), Northern Ireland, Switzerland (consultation mostly across ideological lines), Ethiopia, Zimbabwe-Rhodesia, and South Africa. Some academics have also argued that the European Union resembles a consociational democracy, with consultation across ideological lines.[46][47]

Additionally, a number of peace agreements are consociational, including:

The Islamic Republic of Afghanistan's political system was also described as consociational,[53] although it lacked ethnic quotas.[54]

In addition to the two-state solution to solve the Arab–Israeli conflict, some have argued for a one-state solution under a consociational democracy in the state of Israel, but this solution is not very popular, nor has it been discussed seriously at peace negotiations.[55]

During the 1980s the South African government attempted to reform apartheid into a consociational democracy. The South African Constitution of 1983 applied Lijphart's powersharing ideas by establishing a Tricameral Parliament. During the 1990s negotiations to end apartheid the National Party (NP) and Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) proposed a settlement based upon consociationalism. The African National Congress (ANC) opposed consociationalism and proposed instead a settlement based upon majoritarian democracy. The NP abandoned consociationalism when the U.S. Department of State came out in favor of the majoritarian democracy model in 1992.[56]

See also

References

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  2. ^ McRae, Kenneth D. (September 1979). "Comment: Federation, Consociation, Corporatism—An Addendum to Arend Lijphart". Canadian Journal of Political Science. 12 (3): 517–522 at 520. doi:10.1017/S0008423900051726. ISSN 0008-4239. S2CID 154995368. federalism, consociationalism, and neo-corporatism can be viewed as alternative institutional devices for alleviating strain or overload on central governments and for distributing part of the burden among other sectors of the political system.
  3. ^ du Toit, Pierre (July 1987). "Consociational Democracy and Bargaining Power". Comparative Politics. 19 (4): 419–430 at 425. doi:10.2307/421815. JSTOR 421815. While consociational democracy applies to joint decision making among societal groups, neither of which has a dominant power position, corporatism (especially 'state' corporatism) describes a decision making model where the state is the dominant participant in joint decision making. Both models, however, describe the decision making as characterized by consensus and bargaining.
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Institut Agama Kristen Negeri (IAKN) Palangka RayaJenisperguruan tinggi negeri berstatus BHMNDidirikan1. 1985 (sebagai Akademi Teologi jurusan Pendidikan Agama Kristen di Palangka Raya)2. 1986 (sebagai Institut Agama Kristen “Eka Sinta” GKE Palangka Raya)3. 1995 (Sebagai Fakultas Teologi Jurusan Teologia yang diintegrasikan ke dalam Universitas Kristen Palangka Raya)4. 2002 (Sebagai Sekolah Tinggi Agama Kristen Negeri Palangka Raya)5. 2020 (Sebagai Institut Agama Kristen Negeri Palangka R...

 

Йозеф Август МікушНародився 9 липня 1909(1909-07-09)[1]Кріва, Дольний Кубін, Жилінський крайПомер 19 травня 2005(2005-05-19)[1] (95 років)Кріва, Дольний Кубін, Жилінський край, СловаччинаКраїна  Чехословаччина[2] США СловаччинаДіяльність правник, політик, дипломатЗ...

 

This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) 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: Agriculture in Cambodia – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2015) (Learn how and when to r...

BridgetownNome oficial (en) BridgetownNome local (en) BridgetownGeografiaPaís  BarbadosParóquia Saint MichaelCapital de BarbadosBritish Windward Islands (en)Banhado por Mar das CaraíbasConstitution River (en)Área 38,85 km2Altitude 1 mCoordenadas 13° 05′ 51″ N, 59° 37′ 00″ ODemografiaPopulação 110 000 hab. (2014)Densidade 2 831,4 hab./km2 (2014)Gentílico BridgetonienBridgetonienneFuncionamentoEstatuto capitalGeminações WilmingtonBri...

 

Untuk kegunaan lain, lihat Cilandak dan Cilandak. Koordinat: 6°17′29″S 106°47′28″E / 6.2915°S 106.7910°E / -6.2915; 106.7910 CilandakKecamatanPeta lokasi Kecamatan CilandakNegara IndonesiaProvinsiDKI JakartaKota AdministrasiJakarta SelatanPemerintahan • CamatSayid Ali (Pelaksana harian)[1]Populasi • Total- jiwaKode Kemendagri31.74.06 Kode BPS3171030 Desa/kelurahan5 Cilandak adalah sebuah kecamatan di Jakarta Selatan, Ind...

 

Shokichi Natsui, wereldkampioen 1956 De Wereldkampioenschappen judo 1956 was de eerste editie van de wereldkampioenschappen judo en werd gehouden in Tokio op 3 mei 1956. Medaillewinnaars Mannen Gewichtsklasse 1 Goud 2 Zilver 3 Brons Open Shokichi Natsui Yoshihiko Yoshimatsu Henri Courtine Anton Geesink Medaillespiegel ■ Gastland  Plaats  Land 1 Goud 2 Zilver 3 Brons Totaal 1  Japan 1 1 0 2 2  Frankrijk 0 0 1 1  Nederland 0 0 1 1 Totaal 1 1 2 4 · · Wereldkampi...

This article is about American-style cheerleading. For Japanese-style cheerleading, see Ōendan. Cheerleader redirects here. For other uses, see Cheerleader (disambiguation). Athletic activity based on cheering for a team This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (December 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) College cheerleaders pe...

 

Bandar Udara Minami–Daito南大東空港南大東空港Minamidaitō KūkōTerminal penumpang Bandar Udara Minami–Daito (2010)IATA: MMDICAO: ROMDInformasiJenisPublikPengelolaPemerintah Prefektur OkinawaLokasiMinami Daito, Okinawa, JepangKetinggian dpl mdplPetaROMDLokasi di peta JepangLandasan pacu Arah Panjang Permukaan m kaki 02/20 1.500 4.921 Aspal beton Bandar Udara Minami–Daito (南大東空港code: ja is deprecated , Minamidaitō Kūkō) (IATA: MMD, ICAO: ROMD)[1&...

 

Orani OràneKomuneComune di OraniLokasi Orani di Provinsi NuoroNegara ItaliaWilayah SardiniaProvinsiNuoro (NU)Pemerintahan • Wali kotaAntonio FaddaLuas • Total130,43 km2 (50,36 sq mi)Ketinggian523 m (1,716 ft)Populasi (2016) • Total2,879[1]Zona waktuUTC+1 (CET) • Musim panas (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)Kode pos08026Kode area telepon0784Situs webhttp://www.comune.orani.nu.it Orani (bahasa Sardinia: Oràne) adalah s...

العلاقات الكازاخستانية الموزمبيقية كازاخستان موزمبيق   كازاخستان   موزمبيق تعديل مصدري - تعديل   العلاقات الكازاخستانية الموزمبيقية هي العلاقات الثنائية التي تجمع بين كازاخستان وموزمبيق.[1][2][3][4][5] مقارنة بين البلدين هذه مقارنة عامة ومرج...

 

This article is an orphan, as no other articles link to it. Please introduce links to this page from related articles; try the Find link tool for suggestions. (December 2021) Andrey DitzelBorn (1977-02-14) February 14, 1977 (age 46)Novosibirsk, USSRNationalityUSSRRussiaGermanyOccupation(s)Poet, writer, journalist Andrey Ditzel (born February 14, 1977, Novosibirsk) is a Russian prose writer, poet, journalist and LGBT activist.[1] Biography Born in Novosibirsk on February 14, 1977....

 

Transport pasif merupakan transport ion, molekul, dan senyawa yang tidak memerlukan energi untuk melewati membran plasma. Transport pasif mencakup osmosis dan difusi. Osmosis Efek larutan dengan berbagai varian pada sel darah merah. Osmosis adalah kasus khusus dari transpor pasif, di mana molekul air berdifusi melewati membran yang bersifat selektif permeabel. Dalam sistem osmosis, dikenal larutan hipertonik (larutan yang mempunyai konsentrasi terlarut tinggi), larutan hipotonik (larutan deng...

Irregular soldiers, made up of unmarried youths An archer of the Turkish Galleys - AzabPart of a series on the Military of theOttoman Empire Classical army (1451–1826) Kapıkulu Janissaries Six Divisions of Cavalry Sipahi Voynuks Yamaks Dervendjis Sekban Seymen Seimeni Akinji Azap Levend Timariots Yaya Humbaracı Bashi-bazouk Deli Martolos Reform period Nizam-i Djedid Sekban-i Djedid Auspicious Incident Mansure Army Hamidieh Modern army (1861–1922) Modern Army Navy Imperial Arsenal Ships ...

 

Japanese manga series The Blue Wolves of MibuFirst tankōbon volume cover青のミブロ(Ao no Miburo)GenreChanbara[1]Historical[2] MangaWritten byTsuyoshi YasudaPublished byKodanshaEnglish publisherNA: Kodansha USAImprintShōnen Magazine ComicsMagazineWeekly Shōnen MagazineDemographicShōnenOriginal runOctober 13, 2021 – presentVolumes11 Anime television seriesDirected byKumiko HabaraWritten byKenta IharaMusic byYuki HayashiStudioMaho Film  An...

 

Battle in 1182 in the Holy Land This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) This article has an unclear citation style. The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting. (August 2012) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by a...

Abandoned and incomplete subway tunnel in New York City This article is about the plan to build a subway tunnel from Brooklyn to Staten Island. For the plan to build a vehicular tunnel, see Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge § Early plans. Staten Island TunnelThe 1912 plans of the Staten Island Tunnel to link the Staten Island Railroad to the BMT Fourth Avenue Line.OverviewOfficial nameBrooklyn-Richmond Freight and Passenger Tunnel[1]LineBMT Fourth Avenue LineIND Culver LineStaten I...

 

For the Kraljevski Apartman album, see Long Live Rock 'n' Roll (Kraljevski Apartman album). 1978 studio album by RainbowLong Live Rock 'n' RollStudio album by RainbowReleased14 April 1978[1]RecordedMay–July and December 1977StudioThe Strawberry Studio,Château d'Hérouville, FranceGenre Heavy metal[2] Length39:47LabelPolydorProducerMartin BirchRainbow chronology Rising(1976) Long Live Rock 'n' Roll(1978) Down to Earth(1979) Singles from Long Live Rock 'n' Roll Long L...

 

Strategi Solo vs Squad di Free Fire: Cara Menang Mudah!