Nationhood cleavages and ethnic conflict: A comparative analysis of postcommunist Bulgaria, Montenegro, and North Macedonia
Özet
Why do interethnic tensions in some multiethnic countries escalate into violence while in other cases, the tensions exist but they are contained? Most
theories focus on the nation-state model’s exclusionary logic, different forms of
institutional design, and external intervention by third-party actors. My argument centres around political divisions among the ethnic majority elites over
conceptions of nationhood. Elites divided by a nationhood cleavage create an
opportunity space for violence through a process of double ethnic outbidding.
Majority nationhood cohesion, on the other hand, facilitates cooperation on
ethnic issues among majority elites, prevents outbidding, and thus preserves
interethnic peace. I develop these arguments building on outcome variation
among three otherwise similar Southeast European countries and on conducting 33 semi-structured elite interviews. Post-communist Bulgaria and
Montenegro built enduringly peaceful interethnic relations despite dark shadows of an assimilationist past in the former and the threat posed by greater
Serbian ideology in the latter. Postcommunist North Macedonia, by contrast,
has frequently experienced violent conflict despite a multiethnic past and
a series of consociational arrangements tried until present.
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https://hdl.handle.net/11363/5228Koleksiyonlar
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