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The question of cultural autonomy: Reassessing the merits of cultural autonomy in the post-Cold War

Posted on:2003-02-05Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of DenverCandidate:Roach, Steven CraigFull Text:PDF
GTID:1466390011487206Subject:Political science
Abstract/Summary:
Given the tendency of dominant powers to intervene on behalf of aggrieved groups when their hegemonic interests are at stake, it is important to assess the conditions under which the dominant powers of the international community should recognize an ethnic group's demand for cultural autonomy. Although severe economic oppression, ethnic cleansing, and genocide may warrant support for secession, cultural autonomy, if predicated on a specific criteria of human rights fairness, may prove a better long-term prospect for peace and stability. More specifically, it may help resolve conflicts over resource distribution and territorial boundaries and enable citizens to channel their demands to high political bodies.; This perception is also shared by Otto Bauer, a member of the Austrian Social Democratic Party (1899--1937), who proposed that cultural autonomy serve as concrete arrangement enabling citizens of all ethnic groups to administer their own cultural affairs. A contemporary and comparative analysis of his proposal will be applied to three case studies of regional ethnic conflict: Kosovo, Southeastern Turkey, and the Basque region in Spain. The main argument is structured around a social criteria consisting of four categories: (a) the type and degree and oppression of ethnic groups: (b) unequal social mobility (c) the interests of the main powers of the international community; (d) and the ethnic group's democratic control over their institutions.; Developed within an historical framework of three periods consisting of the Inter-War years (1919--1939), the Cold War (1945--1989) and post-Cold War eras (1989--to the present day), this dissertation assesses the merits of cultural autonomy vs. self-determination. The first period characterizes the League of Nations' failure to promote either of these approaches; the second, the prevalence of self-determination as a colonial right; and the third, the post-colonial ethnic conflict rooted in super-power rivalry. This historically guided analysis concludes with a consideration of the benefits of cultural autonomy in an era of globalization.
Keywords/Search Tags:Cultural autonomy
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