Negotiating National Identity and Self-Determination in Ethnic Conflicts: The Choice Between Pluralism and Ethnic Cleansing

Negotiation Journal - Tập 13 - Trang 327-340 - 1997
Herbert C. Kelman1
1Harvard University, Cambridge

Tóm tắt

The contradictions of ethnonational identity, which make it a prime force in both the promotion and the destruction of human dignity and social justice, have become more pronounced with the ending of the Cold War. It is necessary to reconceptualize national identity and develop new norms for accepting a group's right to national self-determination through establishment of an independent state expressing its national identity, and even far accepting its claim to national identity itself This article proposes that (1) implementation of a group's right to self-determination cannot be left to the group alone, but must be negotiated with those who are affected by that decision, particularly minority populations; and (2) national identity itself must be “negotiated” — explored and discussed — with those who are affected by the group's self-definition.

Tài liệu tham khảo

Kelman, H.C. 1945. Lehaganat ha-le'umiut [In defense of nationalism]. Nir (Hebrew periodical of the Teachers Institute, Yeshiva University, New York).

Kelman, H.C. 1977. The conditions, criteria, and dialectics of human dignity. International Studies Quarterly 21: 529–552.