Ethnic Groups in Conflict, Updated Edition With a New PrefaceUniversity of California Press, 2001 M04 9 - 720 pages Drawing material from dozens of divided societies, Donald L. Horowitz constructs his theory of ethnic conflict, relating ethnic affiliations to kinship and intergroup relations to the fear of domination. A groundbreaking work when it was published in 1985, the book remains an original and powerfully argued comparative analysis of one of the most important forces in the contemporary world. |
From inside the book
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Page 4
... independence or to gain special concessions or even a separate state . But , with some exceptions , ethnic differences tended to be muted until independence was achieved . Following independence , however , the context and the issues ...
... independence or to gain special concessions or even a separate state . But , with some exceptions , ethnic differences tended to be muted until independence was achieved . Following independence , however , the context and the issues ...
Page 5
... independence rally gave way to the ethnic riot . As these issues began to emerge , the independence of Asia and Africa was being felt in Europe and North America . The grant of sovereignty to the former Belgian territories in Africa ...
... independence rally gave way to the ethnic riot . As these issues began to emerge , the independence of Asia and Africa was being felt in Europe and North America . The grant of sovereignty to the former Belgian territories in Africa ...
Page 9
... independence , there were essentially Ibo , Yoruba , and Hausa - dominated parties in Ni- geria , East Indian and Creole parties in Guyana and Trinidad , Sinhalese and Tamil parties in Sri Lanka , Malay and Chinese parties in Malaysia ...
... independence , there were essentially Ibo , Yoruba , and Hausa - dominated parties in Ni- geria , East Indian and Creole parties in Guyana and Trinidad , Sinhalese and Tamil parties in Sri Lanka , Malay and Chinese parties in Malaysia ...
Page 10
... independence movement in Guinea - Bissau was a movement of Balante , with no appreciable support among the Fula . The core of Mozambique's anti - colonial army was recruited from the Makonde in the North of the country , while the ...
... independence movement in Guinea - Bissau was a movement of Balante , with no appreciable support among the Fula . The core of Mozambique's anti - colonial army was recruited from the Makonde in the North of the country , while the ...
Page 13
... independence was won . When the force of ethnic affiliations was acknowledged , ethnic conflict was often treated as if it were a manifestation of something else : the persistence of traditionalism , the stresses of modernization , or ...
... independence was won . When the force of ethnic affiliations was acknowledged , ethnic conflict was often treated as if it were a manifestation of something else : the persistence of traditionalism , the stresses of modernization , or ...
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Ethnic Groups in Conflict, Updated Edition With a New Preface Donald L. Horowitz Limited preview - 2000 |
Common terms and phrases
advanced groups Africa Alliance armed forces army Asian backward groups Baganda Bengalis boundaries British Burma Ceylon Tamils Chinese civil civilian claims cleavages coalition colonial competition composition countries coup Creole cultural Development differences domination East Indians economic election electoral elite emerged ethnic conflict ethnic groups ethnic lines ethnic party systems ethnic politics ethnically based ethnically divided example Federal Party flank Ghana Guyana Hausa Hausa-Fulani Ibid identity independence interethnic intraethnic irredentism issues Kikuyu kinship language leaders Lozi majority Malay Malaysia ment military minority modern movement multiethnic parties Muslim National Nigeria Northern officer corps percent Philippines politicians population position preferences preferential policies Press Princeton Univ Punjab regime region relations rule seats secession secessionist separatism separatist severely divided societies Sierra Leone Sikh Sinhalese SLFP Social Southern Sri Lanka subethnic Sudan Telangana Temne territorial tion Trinidad Uganda UMNO units unranked violence vote voters York Yoruba
Popular passages
Page 24 - In their consequences they differ precisely in this way: ethnic coexistences condition a mutual repulsion and disdain but allow each ethnic community to consider its own honor as the highest one; the caste structure brings about a social subordination and an acknowledgment of 'more honor' in favor of the privileged caste and status groups. This is due to the fact that in the caste structure ethnic distinctions as such have become 'functional...
Page 105 - it is less frequently recognized that tribal movements may be created and instigated to action by the new men of power in furtherance of their own special interests which are, time and time again, the constitutive interests of emerging social classes. Tribalism then becomes a mask for class privilege.
Page 23 - status' segregation grown into a 'caste' differs in its structure from a mere 'ethnic' segregation: the caste structure transforms the horizontal and unconnected coexistences of ethnically segregated groups into a vertical social system of super- and subordination. Correctly formulated: a comprehensive societalization integrates the ethnically divided communities into specific political and communal action.
Page 100 - Ethnic groups persist largely because of their capacity to extract goods and services from the modern sector and thereby satisfy the demands of their members for the components of modernity.
Page 32 - The Development and Persistence of Ethnic Voting," in Lawrence H. Fuchs, ed., American Ethnic Politics (New York: Harper & Row, 1968...
Page 566 - Karl W. Deutsch and William J. Foltz, eds., Nation-Building (New York: Atherton Press, 1963). 2. For a discussion of some of the problems of territorial control in Africa see James S. Coleman, "Problems of Political Integration in Emergent Africa," Western Political Quarterly (March 1955): 844-57.
Page 448 - Morris Janowitz, The Military in the Political Development of New Nations (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1964); Samuel Huntington, Political Order in Changing Societies (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1968), 222.
Page 99 - Social mobilization is a name given to an overall process of change which happens to substantial parts of the population in countries which are moving from traditional to modern ways of life.
Page 568 - Cynthia H. Enloe, Ethnic Conflict and Political Development, Boston, Little, Brown, 1973.
Page 251 - Modern Nationalism in Old Nations as a Consequence of Earlier State-Building: The Case of Basque-Spain," in Wendell Bell and Walter E.