ID | 102827 |
Title Proper | Liberalism and cultural claims in central and eastern Europe |
Other Title Information | toward a pluralist balance |
Language | ENG |
Author | Csergo, Zsuzsa ; Deegan-Krause, Kevin |
Publication | 2011. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article relies on cases from new EU member states in postcommunist Europe to integrate two overlapping debates about majority-minority relations. Since the Second World War, political theorists and international institutions have tended to discourage group-rights approaches in favour of individual rights; meanwhile, policy-makers who achieved interethnic peace in postcommunist Europe have often opted for group-rights approaches. On the basis of political theory, international norms and the conduct of political elites in this region, we argue that both the individual-rights and group-rights approaches can be differentiated internally along the dimension of pluralism - that is, their willingness to accommodate multiple processes of cultural reproduction. Moreover, both group-rights and individual-rights approaches can offer justifications for restricting minority cultural opportunities; furthermore, restrictive group-rights approaches sometimes cloak their efforts behind 'Western-sounding' individual-rights rhetoric. Likewise, both group-rights and individual-rights approaches can permit group accommodation that can lead to political integration. We find that de facto pluralist approaches to minority accommodation - often spearheaded by moderate parties of the majority in coalition with minority-group parties - encourage ethnic peace, regardless of their foundation in individual or group rights. |
`In' analytical Note | Nations and Nationalism Vol. 17, No. 1; Jan 2011: p.85-107 |
Journal Source | Nations and Nationalism Vol. 17, No. 1; Jan 2011: p.85-107 |
Key Words | Central Europe ; Ethnicity ; Group Rights ; Individual Rights ; Political Parties |