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Call for Papers

Theme: Ethnic Politics and Electoral Democracy
Subtitle: 
Type: International Conference
Institution: NCCR Democracy & Centre for Comparative and
International Studies (CIS), University of Zurich
Location: Zurich (Switzerland)
Date: 14.–16.6.2012
Deadline: 15.8.2011

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Providing political integration in multi-ethnic societies is one of
the pressing issues of democratic governance in the 21st century.
Over a half-century ago, a distinguished American political
scientist, E.E. Schattschneider said that to speak of democracy and
political representation is “to speak of political parties”. In the
proposed conferences, we plan on combining the themes of civic
inclusion and the study of the ethnic basis of political party
organization within the widen rubric of ethnic conflict resolution.
When ethnic divides serve as focal points for political division, we
may see ethnically based political parties and/or parties that seek
to bridge ethnic divisions in the society. However, multi-ethnic
parties re­main rare in divided societies, while they are much more
common in plural societies, where ethnicity plays a weaker role in
setting the course of political competition.

Research on the links between ethnic politics and electoral democracy
has mainly looked at the links between electoral and other
institutions and levels of ethnic voting in ethnically diverse
societies, on the one hand, and on links between electoral and other
institutions and the political stability of these societies on the
other. This work has been both empirical and normative. A key
normative split has been between the school of power sharing, which
advocates proportional representation methods for ethnically divided
societies and the centripetalist school, which advocates majoritarian
rules, notably the alternative vote, that are intended to foster vote
pooling across ethnic lines on the part of “moderate” voters. This
normative debate has had two empirical components, trying to identify
differences in the performance of PR versus majoritarian institutions
in terms of moderating ethnic conflicts, and looking at levels of
ethnic voting and the bases of party organization under different
institutional arrangements.

The starting point of many theoretical models relies on homogeneous
preferences of ethnic groups in ethnic conflicts. This assumption,
however, has been challenged by others who take a more nuanced tone,
arguing that the effect of electoral rules on ethnic representation
and conflict mediation can be very context dependent. First, voters
in multi-ethnic societies have more than just a single-dimensional
ethnic identity, and different identities can be activated. Second,
even in a multi-ethnic context, there are other than ethnic issues
(e.g. economic issues) that matter for vote choice. Third, even on
ethnic issues themselves, there are very different degrees of
political radicalization, and the moderates of different ethnic
groups might have more points in common than a moderate and radical
of the same ethnic group

In this workshop we aim at bringing together scholars of diverse
theoretical perspectives with knowledge of different regions of the
world to seek to provide a new insights and potential synthesis. The
workshop especially seeks work that looks at questions such as the
following:

- Which models of institutional engineering are best for multi-ethnic
or post-conflict societies? Are there new models of electoral
engineering for multi-ethnic societies, and which goals do they aim
at?

- Which factors explain political radicalization and the
(non-)success of ethnically radical political parties in multi-ethnic
societies?

- When do multi-ethnic political parties and multi-ethnic coalitions
(electoral coalitions, governing coalitions) emerge?

- What are the consequences of bans on ethnically defined political
parties?

- What drives political unity or internal splits of ethnic groups?
How do intra-group divides affect intra-ethnic electoral competition,
radicalisation and/or prospects of inter-ethnic cooperation?

- How can ethnicity be measured quantitatively and how are identities
affected by ethnic politics?

- Which are the implications of political representation in
multi-ethnic societies for related research fields, such as ethnic
conflict, or the protection of ethnic minority rights?

Submissions

Paper proposals should be sent by 15 August 2011 to:
[email protected]
Proposals should contain a title and an abstract (200-400 words),
containing short information about the research question, the
envisaged theoretical model, research design, and expected results.
Please also provide full contact information and short bio (50-100
words). A limited number of papers will be selected to be presented
at the conference. Authors will be notified by the end of September
2011. Full funding is available for a limited number of paper givers
(with preference for European scholars, due to travel costs).


Contact:

Daniel Bochsler
NCCR Democracy
University of Zurich
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.bochsler.eu/ethnicpolitics/
 
 
 
 
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