
Democracy and Cultural Diversity
Oxford University Press
Published on 13. July 2000
Book
Paperback/Softback
240 pages
978-0-19-929000-0 (ISBN)
Description
The nation state is now faced with unprecedented pressures. Global shifts (a medley of powerful forces in contemporary political economy, military affairs and international security, technology and communications, cultural changes, ecological challenges and so on) require policy solutions at levels of governance beyond traditional states. At the same time, and in part as a response to these wider forces and the uncertainty they bring in their wake, established national polities are challenged too by the rise of politicized sub-national (ethnic, religious, linguistic and cultural) movements. This phenomenon presents a challenge to the extant political systems and the elites who manage their affairs. Moreover, it offers a particular challenge to democratic states. Inasmuch as these polities celebrate the virtues of self-determination and encourage pluralism as a matter of course, flourishing and assertive movements demanding in some degree the re-negotiation of the national bargain, present a serious challenge to the continuity of historic national projects. At the same time, democracy is particularly well equipped, both as a discourse and method of practising politics, for accommodating cultural diversity. This book contains an overview of this challenge to the art of democratic government, and case studies from every region of the world. The contributions are by acknowledged international experts on how democratic states have confronted the task of managing cultural diversity and accommodating perceived differences of identity short of political break-up.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 14 mm
Weight
368 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-929000-0 (9780199290000)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Dennis Austin was a Tutor at the University of Ghana in the 1950s, a Research Fellow at the University of London in the 1960s, a Professor of Government of the University of Manchester in the 1970s, and Pro-Vice Chancellor of the University of Manchester in the 1980s. He is now Honorary Fellow and Emeritus Professor at the Institute of Development at the University of Manchester. Michael O'Neill has lectured in politics at Manchester Metropolitan, Sheffield Hallam
and Nottingham Trent Universities between 1972 and the present.
and Nottingham Trent Universities between 1972 and the present.
Editor
Department of PoliticsDepartment of Politics, Nottingham Trent University
Institute for DevelopmentInstitute for Development, University of Manchester
Content
1. Introduction: Democracy and Cultural Diversity ; 2. Unity versus Diversity in Canada under Trudeau and Chretien ; 3. Political Management of Diversity in Post-Revolutionary Mexico ; 4. Constitutional Reform and Ethnic Rights: Latin America ; 5. The Politics of Identity in Democratic Spain: Catalonia and the Basque Country ; 6. From Dicey to Devolution: Managing Territorial Diversity in Britain ; 7. Switzerland: A Paradigm in Evolution ; 8. Language, Ethnicity and Nationality in Belgium ; 9. Language and National Unity in Slovakia ; 10. Ghana in the 1990s: Un Beau Voyage? ; 11. Democracy, Federalism and Ethnic Rivalry in Nigeria ; 12. Lebanon ; 13. India: Democracy and Dissent ; 14. Malaysia: Dilemmas of Integration ; 15. Dealing with Difference: Four Models of Pluralist Politics