Inclusion, Recognition, and Inter-Group Comparisons: The Effects of Power-Sharing Institutions on Grievances
Open access
Author
Date
2023-10Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
Extant evidence suggests that power-sharing reduces the participation of minorities in civil conflict by alleviating their grievances. Yet, it remains unclear how and to what degree power-sharing should be institutionalized. Moreover, direct attitudinal evidence for the grievance mechanism remains rare. Addressing these gaps, I argue that corporate power-sharing which is constitutionally-enshrined and explicitly recognizes minorities most strongly alleviates their grievances. However, it simultaneously accentuates the importance of relative inter-group comparisons. This means that minorities with a lower relative degree of corporate power-sharing than their 'peers' in the same country and transnational kin population should have higher grievances, irrespective of its absolute level. Using an extensive combination of mass survey data, I test my expectations in a series of hierarchical multi-level models. By highlighting the importance of institutional design, my results have significant implications for policy in multi-ethnic societies and for the scholarly literature on accommodation and grievances more generally. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000599431Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Journal of Conflict ResolutionVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
SAGESubject
power sharing; consociationalism; grievances; constitutionsFunding
20-1 FEL-27 - Majority backlashes against minority accommodation: Drivers, consequences, and policy implications (ETHZ)
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