How to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational TheoryHow to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational Theory
In the 1960s, consociational theory was developed to explain how deeply divided societies can arrive at peace. The theory had, on the one hand, an institutional component with an emphasis on power-sharing institutions and, on the other, a cultural component stressing the importance of a spirit of ac...
| 發表在: | Journal of Deliberative Democracy |
|---|---|
| Main Authors: | , |
| 格式: | Article |
| 語言: | 英语 |
| 出版: |
University of Westminster Press
2019-12-01
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| 主題: | |
| 在線閱讀: | https://delibdemjournal.org/article/id/619/ |
| _version_ | 1849745507671343104 |
|---|---|
| author | Jürg Steiner Maria-Clara Jaramillo |
| author_facet | Jürg Steiner Maria-Clara Jaramillo |
| author_sort | Jürg Steiner |
| collection | DOAJ |
| container_title | Journal of Deliberative Democracy |
| description | In the 1960s, consociational theory was developed to explain how deeply divided societies can arrive at peace. The theory had, on the one hand, an institutional component with an emphasis on power-sharing institutions and, on the other, a cultural component stressing the importance of a spirit of accommodation. Initially, the theory was based on case studies of countries like Austria, Belgium, the Netherlands and Switzerland, which allowed dealing with both institutional and cultural aspects. Later on, when the theory was tested with a large sample of countries, the cultural aspect was increasingly neglected, because it was difficult to empirically operationalize. The key argument of the article is that the concept of deliberation helps emphasize the cultural aspect of consociational theory, in the hopes of refining, not replacing, consociational theory. |
| format | Article |
| id | doaj-art-bcae4e0c8ff84eb1aa424c6e8a5964ad |
| institution | Directory of Open Access Journals |
| issn | 2634-0488 |
| language | English |
| publishDate | 2019-12-01 |
| publisher | University of Westminster Press |
| record_format | Article |
| spelling | doaj-art-bcae4e0c8ff84eb1aa424c6e8a5964ad2025-08-20T01:43:00ZengUniversity of Westminster PressJournal of Deliberative Democracy2634-04882019-12-0115310.16997/jdd.347How to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational TheoryHow to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational TheoryJürg Steiner0Maria-Clara Jaramillo1 School of Juridical Sciences, Pontificia Universidad JaverianaIn the 1960s, consociational theory was developed to explain how deeply divided societies can arrive at peace. The theory had, on the one hand, an institutional component with an emphasis on power-sharing institutions and, on the other, a cultural component stressing the importance of a spirit of accommodation. Initially, the theory was based on case studies of countries like Austria, Belgium, the Netherlands and Switzerland, which allowed dealing with both institutional and cultural aspects. Later on, when the theory was tested with a large sample of countries, the cultural aspect was increasingly neglected, because it was difficult to empirically operationalize. The key argument of the article is that the concept of deliberation helps emphasize the cultural aspect of consociational theory, in the hopes of refining, not replacing, consociational theory.https://delibdemjournal.org/article/id/619/BrazilColombiaSwitzerlandBosnia and Herzegovinaconsociationaldeliberation |
| spellingShingle | Jürg Steiner Maria-Clara Jaramillo How to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational TheoryHow to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational Theory Brazil Colombia Switzerland Bosnia and Herzegovina consociational deliberation |
| title | How to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational TheoryHow to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational Theory |
| title_full | How to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational TheoryHow to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational Theory |
| title_fullStr | How to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational TheoryHow to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational Theory |
| title_full_unstemmed | How to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational TheoryHow to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational Theory |
| title_short | How to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational TheoryHow to Arrive at Peace in Deeply Divided Societies? Using Deliberation to Refine Consociational Theory |
| title_sort | how to arrive at peace in deeply divided societies using deliberation to refine consociational theoryhow to arrive at peace in deeply divided societies using deliberation to refine consociational theory |
| topic | Brazil Colombia Switzerland Bosnia and Herzegovina consociational deliberation |
| url | https://delibdemjournal.org/article/id/619/ |
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