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PO377 Ethnic Conflict and Political Violence

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PO377 ETHNIC CONFLICT AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE Week 13: Non-Violent Strategies for Change Lecture Outline Defining Ethnic Conflict What is Non-Violent Action? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PO377 Ethnic Conflict and Political Violence


1
PO377 Ethnic Conflict and Political Violence
  • Week 13
  • Non-Violent Strategies for Change

2
Lecture Outline
  • Defining Ethnic Conflict
  • What is Non-Violent Action?
  • Categories of non-violent action
  • Principled vs. pragmatic non-violence
  • Things to bear in mind
  • Famous Practitioners
  • Gandhi
  • Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • Reasons to Prefer Non-Violent Resistance
  • Can Non-Violent Action Bring About Change?
  • Why civil resistance works
  • Problems for Situations of Ethnic Conflict
  • Summary

3
Defining Ethnic Conflict
  • Ethnic conflicts are conflicts in which the
    goals of at least one conflict party are defined
    in (exclusively) ethnic terms, and in which the
    primary fault line of confrontation is one of
    ethnic distinctions (Wolff 2007 2).
  • However we can distinguish between violent and
    non-violent ethnic conflict (Varshney 2007) and
    the latter can be further distinguished into
  • institutionalised forms of ethnic protest (e.g.
    in the context of electoral politics) and
  • Non-violent actions outside of (formally)
    institutionalised political channels this is
    what we are interested in today.

4
What is Non-Violent Action?
  • Nonviolent strategies for change include strikes,
    boycotts, sit-ins, protests, marches, petitions,
    walk-outs, law breaking, mock funerals....
  • Gandhi on the Salt March 1930

5
What is Non-Violent Action? (2)
  • Nonviolent resistance is a civilian-based method
    used to wage conflict through social,
    psychological, economic, and political means
    without the threat or use of violence (Stephan
    and Chenoweth 2008 7).
  • Defining features of nonviolent action (Schock
    2005)
  • Does not involve physical violence or the threat
    of physical violence against human beings
  • Involves activity in the collective pursuit of
    social or political objectives
  • Is non-institutional and indeterminate.

6
What is Non-Violent Action? (3)
  • Categories of non-violent action (Sharp 1973)
  • methods of protest and persuasion largely
    symbolic, intended to persuade the opponent or to
    produce awareness of injustices and the extent of
    dissent (e.g. protests, marches, mock funerals)
  • methods of non-cooperation intended to undermine
    the power, resources and legitimacy of the
    government (e.g. strikes, economic boycotts, acts
    of civil disobedience)
  • methods of non-violent intervention intended to
    directly disrupt operations that support the
    status quo or to develop preferred alternatives
    (e.g. sit-ins, sabotage, creating parallel
    institutions).

7
What is Non-Violent Action? (4)
  • Principled vs. pragmatic non-violence
  • principled non-violence grounded in religious
    and ethically based injunctions against violence
    (Stephan and Chenoweth 2008 10) non-violence as
    a way of life and moral imperative central aim
    is the conversion of the opponent in order to
    bring about change (e.g. Gandhi, Martin Luther
    King, Jr.)
  • pragmatic non-violence non-violence as most
    effective method available in the given
    circumstances morality or beliefs not central
    main aim is defeat of opponent in order to bring
    about change strategic rather than principled
    (violent protest shifts attention away from what
    is under protest and towards the violent act).

8
What is Non-Violent Action? (5)
  • Things to bear in mind
  • Non-violent action is not the same as pacifism
    (Zunes 1994) pacifism does not necessarily
    involve political action nor is everyone who uses
    non-violent strategies for change a pacifist.
  • Violent and non-violent strategies for change can
    and frequently do co-exist.
  • Nonviolent struggle does not mean the absence of
    violence (Schock 2005 8) governments may
    respond with violence to non-violent action.

9
Famous Practitioners
  • Gandhi
  • Mohandas Gandhi used mass non-violent resistance
    to change racist anti-Indian laws in South Africa
    and then to try to bring down British colonialism
    in India.
  • By 1907 in South Africa had formulated method
    known as satyagraha (truth-force) militant
    form of non-violent resistance. Gandhi and
    followers accepted fines, jail sentences and
    physical abuse.

10
Famous Practitioners (2)
  • Gandhi
  • 1915 Gandhi returned to India. Led national
    resistance movement 1920-22 using non-violent
    non-cooperation with British colonizers.
    Imprisoned. 1930-31 salt campaign, acted against
    oppressive salt laws. Imprisoned. 1942-44 Quit
    India campaign.
  • India granted independence 1947. Gandhi
    assassinated in 1948 by Hindu extremist objecting
    to his call for Hindu-Muslim unity.

11
Famous Practitioners (3)
  • Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • Mid-1950s to mid-1960s Black civil rights
    campaign in America most visible leader Martin
    Luther King, Jr. (assassinated 1968).
  • Distinguished between just and unjust laws
    asserted commitment to rule of law in general but
    argued unjust law has no moral requirement to be
    followed (moral imperative to change unjust
    laws).
  • Distinction between just and unjust laws based on
    Christian morality made reference to natural law
    and thoughts of St Thomas Aquinas.

12
Famous Practitioners (4)
  • Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • I submit that an individual who breaks a law
    that conscience tells him is unjust, and
    willingly accepts the penalty by staying in jail
    to arouse the conscience of the community over
    its injustice, is in reality expressing the very
    highest respect for law.
  • (King, Letter from Birmingham City Jail,
    reproduced in Bedau 1991.)

13
Reasons to Prefer Non-Violent Resistance
  1. Moral obligation (Sharp 1963), violence is in
    itself an evil (Zinn 2003)
  2. Violence is incompatible with civil disobedience
    as a form of public, political address within
    limits of overall adherence to law (Rawls 1971)
  3. Non-violence is more desirable than violence as a
    means, since one of the principles guiding
    advocates of civil disobedience may be the belief
    in a non-violent world as an end goal (Zinn 2003)

14
Reasons to Prefer Non-Violent Resistance (2)
  1. One of the points of civil disobedience is to
    communicate with and educate others the use of
    indiscriminate violence, particularly against
    people, turns other people against the cause
    (Zinn 2003)
  2. Violent conflict is too costly (Zunes 1994)
  3. Unarmed methods are more effective (Zunes 1994).

15
Can Non-Violent Action Bring About Change?
  • Sharp (1973) Yes
  • Political power is not monolithic, i.e. it is not
    fixed, indestructible or self-perpetuating.
  • Rather, political power is relational, i.e. it
    depends on the cooperation and obedience of the
    people and is therefore pluralistic and fragile.
  • Reasons for obedience are variable and can be
    strengthened or weakened. If a sufficient number
    of people decide not to co-operate or obey, the
    government will be unable to rule. In this
    manner, non-violent actions can bring about
    change.

16
Source Schock (2005 4)
17
Can Non-Violent Action Bring About Change? (2)
  • Why civil resistance works (Stephan and Chenoweth
    2008)
  • Commitment to non-violent methods
  • Enhances domestic legitimacy
  • Encourages more broad-based participation in
    resistance
  • Enhances international legitimacy.
  • Regime violence against non-violent movements is
    likely to backfire, showing the violent regime in
    such a negative light that shifts of opinion
    occur (Sharps political jiu-jitsu).

18
Pop Quiz
  • Would a concerted campaign of non-violent
    resistance from the middle of 1993, urging the
    Rwandan government to properly implement the
    Arusha Accords, have led to multi-ethnic
    government and prevented the genocide?
  • Yes
  • No

19
Problems for Situations of Ethnic Conflict
  • Most ideas about civil disobedience assume that
    although disobeyer feels a particular law or
    policy is unjust, they have faith in and accept
    the wider structure of law and political system
    as a whole. Also assumed that the society has a
    general shared conception of justice (Rawls
    1971).
  • Problematic for ethno-national conflict
    situations legitimacy of overall political
    system is often what is at issue in the conflict
    such societies often have little basis for a
    shared sense of justice.

20
Problems for Situations of Ethnic Conflict (2)
  • Acts of non-violent resistance are only
    purposeful if authorities are open to some degree
    of persuasion and change, otherwise tactics will
    fail and lead to disillusionment and violence
    amongst followers (MacFarlane 1971).
  • Sri Lanka mid-1950s to mid-1960s Tamil
    satyagraha campaigns faced violent response and
    political and legislative compromises with the
    government that were achieved collapsed. Tamil
    agitation became increasingly violent and the
    political goal more extreme.
  • Northern Ireland civil rights campaign from
    1967 demonstrations faced counter-demonstrations
    by loyalists that soon turned violent. Helped
    feed support for violent methods of political
    struggle.

21
Problems for Situations of Ethnic Conflict (3)
  • Civil disobedience theory is overwhelmingly
    directed at political contexts of liberal
    democracy and the practice is largely associated
    with political protest in liberal democratic
    systems. Rawls theory of civil disobedience is
    explicitly directed at situations of near
    justice, i.e. legitimately established
    democratic authority.
  • Not particularly helpful for many contexts of
    ethno-national conflict and/or non-liberal
    democratic systems.

22
Summary
  • Not all ethnic conflicts are violent.
  • Non-violent strategies for change pursue
    political objectives outside of formally
    institutionalised political channels and without
    the threat of physical violence. They can be
    distinguished according to the intentions,
    methods and motivations of those who implement
    non-violent strategies.
  • Practitioners of non-violent strategies have
    achieved some significant political and social
    change.

23
Summary (2)
  • Notion of a shared sense of justice underpinning
    protest is problematic for ethnically divided
    societies.
  • The problem of response may be a difficult one in
    situations of ethnic conflict.
  • Civil disobedience theory is largely directed at
    contexts of liberal democracy problematic for
    other contexts?
  • Non-violent methods enhance domestic and
    international legitimacy. Following pragmatic
    considerations, they are preferable to violent
    strategies for change, as they can potentially be
    more effective and less costly.
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