Synopses & Reviews
This book is concerned with the continuing importance of ethnicity in the political processes of the contemporary world. Carefully selected case studies are placed into a comparative context in order to explore both the range of ethnopolitical conflict and the efforts to manage it in advanced democratic, democratizing post-communist, and developing countries. Throughout, the focus is on (1) the impact of ethnicity on domestic and international politics; (2) the changing nature of the means by which ethnic conflict is currently being managed; and (3) the variables which affect the dynamics of ethnopolitics - in particular, the relationship of ethnicity to such other forms of social and political differentiation and segmentation as class and territoriality.
Review
"This book is based on a lifetime's study of ethnopolitical conflict across the globe, including considerable fieldwork. Its case studies are designed to illuminate broader comparative points about how such persistent but fluid demands can be accommodated in the policy processes of various regimes around the world. It is wide-ranging, theoretically informed, and provocative in its conclusions."--Donley T. Studlar, Eberly Family Distinguished Professor of Political Science, West Virginia University
Review
"This book is based on a lifetime's study of ethnopolitical conflict across the globe, including considerable fieldwork. Its case studies are designed to illuminate broader comparative points about how such persistent but fluid demands can be accommodated in the policy processes of various regimes around the world. It is wide-ranging, theoretically informed, and provocative in its conclusions."--Donley T. Studlar, Eberly Family Distinguished Professor of Political Science, West Virginia University "This book is the magnum opus of a scholar who has for many years been publishing seminal works on problems arising from the ethnic heterogeneity of states. Only one with such a background could produce a volume so rich in its variety of source material and so penetrating in its analyses. Innovations include a two-fold classification of ethnic groups predicated upon whether they are living within or without their ethnic homeland, a classification permitting the author to transcend the cleavage between ethnonationalism and ethnicity; a tripartite division of states into mature democratic, post-communist, and emerging categories; and, for each of these three categories, a combination of a wealth of illustrative data drawn from several states, further illustrated by an in-depth, single-state case study. This is truly an important contribution to the literature."--Walker Connor, Distinguished Visiting Professor, Middlebury College
Synopsis
This book offers a brief, broad, comparative study of ethnic politics that places ethnic conflict within the context of particular political systems. To develop these themes, they are explored by comparing and contrasting the experiences of France, Czechoslovakia and its subsequent division, and Nigeria.
Synopsis
A comparative look at the issue of ethnic politics and conflict using the case studies of France, Czechoslovakia, and Nigeria.
About the Author
Joseph Rudolph is Professor of Political Science at Towson University. He has edited
Encyclopedia of Twentieth Century Ethnic Conflict (Greenwood, Forthcoming) and
Ethnoterritorial Politics, Policy, and the Western World (Lynne Rienner, 1989)
Table of Contents
Introduction: Ethnicity and Politics in the Contemporary World *
Part I. France: Ethnopolitics in the Developed West * The Politics of Ethnicity in a Continental Power * Ethnoterritorial Politics in France * Ethnoclass Politics in France * Ethnopolitics in France in a Comparative Perspective *
Part II. Czechoslovakia: Ethnopolitics in the Democratizing, Postcommunist World * The Setting of Politics in Democratizing Postcommunist Europe * Ethnoterritorial Politics and the Creation and Dissolution of a State * Ethnoclass Politics: the Romany in the Former Czechoslovakia * Ethnopolitics in the Former Czechoslovakia in a Comparative Perspective *
Part III. Nigeria: Ethnopolitics in the Third World * The Setting of Politics in Africa's Largest Country * Tribalism and Ethnoterritorial Conflict in Nigeria * Ethnoclass, Ethno-Religious Conflict in Post Civil War Nigeria * Ethnic Conflict in Nigeria in a Comparative Perspective * Conclusion: Managing Ethnopolitical Conflict In The Contemporary World