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Political Identity: institutions, territory and language

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Title: Political Identity: institutions, territory and language


1
Political Identity institutions, territory and
language
  • Alistair Cole

2
Territorial identities
  • Moreno Ethno-territorial identities reflect
    themselves in sub-state political institutions,
    distinctive party systems, language rights
    movements and cultural traditions and specific
    forms of elite accommodation.
  • In Spain, in particular, there has been a move
    to a form of asymmetrical federalism, where the
    three nations Catalonia, Basque Country and
    Galicia are recognised as historic
    nationalities in the 1978 constitution and given
    extended devolved powers.
  • In the UK, the minority nationalist question has
    been nested in a broader class cleavage in both
    Scotland and Wales, national identity came as
    a result of a specific feeling of class identity
    and of being different from the rest of the UK.
  • If there are fashions, this is one. In Italy, a
    move to regional evolution has accompanied more
    assertive regional claims, such as that of
    Padania in the north.
  • But do institutions artificially create
    identities?

3
New Regionalism? Be careful..
  • The norm in Europe is for an asymmetrical
    configuration of government and a multiplicity of
    institutional regimes(Majone, 2003).
  • But In some states, regions are weak or
    non-existent, especially where there is a
    tradition of strong local government, as in the
    Netherlands, the Scandanavian countries or for
    much of its history the United Kingdom
  • In some of the smaller European Union countries,
    such as Portugal, Greece or Ireland, there is a
    tradition of centralisation that has difficulties
    in accommodating regions. In the countries of
    central and Eastern Europe, there is no tradition
    of autonomous regional level administration
    (Marcou, 2003).
  • During the EU enlargement negotiations, there was
    much opposition from within these countries to
    creating new decentralised structures, with the
    new entrants fearful lest irredentist national
    minorities try and break away and create their
    own states.
  • Though the European Commission started off by
    advocating decentralisation, it swiftly moved to
    the idea of centralised regional economic
    planning. In some countries, regions are
    principally city regions, based around large
    cities and their hinterland (Parkinson, 1992).
  • Dangers of theorising on the dependent
    variable.

4
Spain an attractive model for devolutionists
  • The Spanish model is frequently evoked in
    interviews in Wales as the ideal solution for
    enhanced autonomy, including by First Minister
    Morgan.
  • The Spanish case is attractive for Welsh
    policy-makers in particular because it appears to
    hold out the promise of allowing the autonomous
    development of the national region, along the
    lines of Catalonia or Galicia.
  • The move to democracy in Spain from 1975 onwards
    was closely linked with accommodating Spains
    historic nations and regions and rallying
    everybody to the democratic cause.
  • The State of Autonomies embodied in the 1978
    Constitution represented the most radical
    regionalisation of any European state at the
    time. It created 17 Autonomous Communities with
    far reaching devolved powers. Catalonia, the
    Basque Country and Galicia were recognised early
    on as historic nationalities, facilitating
    their support for the plural Spanish nation.

5
Spain identity or institutions?
  • The Spanish state is neither federal nor
    unitary.. here there is a strong institutional
    argument. No-one wants to be left behind and ACs
    are discovering ancient identities
  • Until recently, Apart from one or two exceptions
    (such as the Basque tax-raising powers) in theory
    all autonomous communities have the right to
    exercise the powers of the strongest communities.
  • Since 1995, the weakest communities have caught
    up with the stronger ones in terms of
    competencies. The precise list of competencies
    depends on the organic laws in existence in each
    of the autonomous communities.
  • In some policy areas, the autonomous community
    has complete legislative and regulatory powers,
    not dependent upon the Spanish State. In some
    areas, there are shared powers, and in still
    others exclusive Spanish state responsibility.

6
Spain Institutional incentives to identivise
  • There is an inherent tension between recognising
    historic identities and providing the opportunity
    for all Spanish regions to develop their own
    institutional capacity within the Union State.
  • In some important respects, the Spanish model
    does not favour the historic nationalities over
    other regions. The constitution does not
    establish a hierarchy between the historic
    communities and the others. In legal terms, any
    autonomous community can call itself a nation, if
    it so desires.
  • While during the 1980s, only the three historic
    nationalities plus Andalusia had proclaimed
    themselves to be nations, by 1999 eight out of 17
    autonomous communities were recognised as
    nationalities.
  • Weaker regions have pointedly developed their
    national identities in order to prevent
    incorporation by stronger neighbours (the case
    for Valencia in relation to Catalonia).
    Devolution in Spain has somewhat artificially
    provoked a wide range of regionalist demands.
  • In the case of Spanish devolution, then, we can
    identify a clear institutional effect.
    Institutions create a spiral effect and have
    introduced a race for autonomy, a lesson
    policy-makers in the UK would be advised to take
    on board.

7
Slippery slope
  • New Catalan statute approved by the Catalan
    parliament in 2005, setting out Catalonia as a
    nation. Eventually approved by the Spanish
    lower house on 30th March 2006. The Catalan
    statute involves
  • Recognition of Catalan national identity
  • national reality as a nationality
  • Control over legal affairs
  • Strengthens Catalonia in relation to the EU and
    foreign policy
  • Catalan parliament to raise 50 of income tax and
    VAT and create a revenue agency
  • Catalan examples followed by Valencia, Andalucia
    and Basque country.

8
Germany instrumentalism ovder identity
  • Germany provides a contrast both to Spanish
    asymmetry and Belgian communautarianism. The
    Federal Republic of Germany provides the
    interesting case of a federal system that does
    not allow great room for policy diversity.
  • By imposing federalism upon western Germany in
    1949, the occupying powers sought to reduce the
    power of central government and ensure a stable
    democracy.
  • Even after sixty years of operation, there
    remains something artificial about German
    federalism. Unlike in a country such as Canada,
    German federalism does not reflect the
    organisation of a society with specific
    minorities. There are no significant ethnic,
    cultural, social or religious tensions in
    Germany.
  • Moreover, the 16 state governments (the länder)
    are artificial units that do not correspond to
    historic German regions and do not reflect
    cultural, historic or linguistic differences
    within Germany.
  • Even after sixty years of institutional
    existence, Germans feel themselves to be members
    of a local or a national community rather than a
    land. Their real attachment to regions is to
    those based on dialects, customs and culture such
    as the Rhineland, Palatinate, Badenia, or
    Franconia.

9
Germany
  • There is a very close interdependency between the
    federal and the state (länder) governments, the
    system of interlocking politics described by
    Scharpf.
  • The länder are legally bound into a system of
    joint decision-making and revenue-sharing, and
    share a strong normative commitment to policy
    uniformity.
  • The länder co-operate closely with the federal
    government in matters of regional economic
    policy, agriculture and the planning of
    universities.
  • The länder are closely involved in
    decision-making at the federal level through the
    composition of the second chamber, the bundesrat,
    which has a veto on federal legislation in around
    50 of cases.
  • Unlike in Belgium or even Spain, there is a
    strict system of fiscal redistribution and most
    resources for federal governments and the länder
    come from joint taxes.
  • For all these reasons, there is a greater
    uniformity of policy in Germany than might be
    expected in a federal system.
  • Identity is squeezed out by institutions(exceptio
    n of the case of Bavaria).

10
Belgium linguistic fracture
  • The case of Belgium is the most eloquent in terms
    of demonstrating the centrifugal effects of
    linguistic divisions
  • .
  • Belgium was created as an independent state in
    1830 domination of the French-speaking Walloons
    in the south.. at the expense of the Dutch
    speaking Flemish, mainly in the north. In the
    course of the mid 20th century, the economic and
    linguistic balance began to shift so that the
    downtrodden Flemish now became the majority of
    the population and the more dynamic economic
    community.
  • The only solution discovered to prevent the
    complete dissolution of the Belgian state the
    policy of separate language communities (from
    1963), to deal with issues of education and
    culture, for the different communities.
  • The language issue has had a profound impact in
    Belgium, to the extent of changing the party
    system and replacing Belgian-wide parties - e.g.
    Socialists, with specific parties for each
    community. Here language has had the effect of a
    cleavage
  • Institutions have encouraged linguistic
    identities and language performs the role of a
    key cleavage.

11
Lesser Used languages as sources of identity
  • There is a strong argument that recent moves to
    more differentiated forms of regional and local
    governance are likely to encourage linguistic
    pluralism (see, for example, Keating, Loughlin
    and Deschouwer, 2003).
  • In countries such as Spain, Belgium and Italy,
    the move to enhanced regional self-consciousness
    in the 1980s and 1990s was associated with a
    rediscovery of the value of lesser-used languages
    and cultures and the adoption of new policy
    instruments to plan language revival.
  • In the age of think global, act local, language
    can exercise a useful signalling function,
    demonstrating clearly the distinctiveness and
    value-added identity of specific regions.

12
Some examples
  • Catalonia, Basque country, Galicia ability to
    speak the regional language essential for
    self-promotion
  • Ireland Gaelic speakers 2-3 of the population,
    but mastery essential for higher office
  • Wales Welsh Language Act (1993) introduces
    bilingualism. Welsh an official langiuage of the
    EU

13
The Welsh Language Identity, institutions
  • In broad socio-economic terms, Welsh has expanded
    its usage considerably in the past two decades
    and the language is now used widely in education,
    the media, leisure and selected public services.
  • Language survey data suggests that social
    context, family language transmission and
    exposure to formal bilingual education are the
    key factors in language reproduction.
  • In the case of Wales, community and family are
    less powerful agents of language reproduction
    than they were previously, but formal bilingual
    education and language planning has slowed the
    rate of absolute decline.
  • Analysis of family/household composition patterns
    by Aitchison and Carter (1997) show that an
    extremely high proportion of Welsh speakers is
    linguistically isolated within their home
    environments.
  • Many communities of the northern and western
    heartland seem to be fragmenting irretrievably,
    threatening the transmission of the Welsh
    language. Welsh is not secure as a community
    language despite its official status.
  • Rather like in Spain, devolved instituions create
    a space for a linguistic identity

14
Other variants of WelshnessClass
  • There are clearly sociological differences in
    bases to identity.
  • Model I indicates that there is not much
    territorial variation, with only individuals
    residing in the Valleys showing a much greater
    propensity towards Welsh identity than the
    Cardiff reference.
  • Interestingly, even in areas of reputed
    Welshness such as the North-West of Wales and
    mid-Wales, there is no significant difference
    from the capital indeed North-West Wales is
    slightly more British in its identification.
  • Once language is excluded, the territorial
    effect washes out.

15
Age
  • Model II shows greater variation by sociological
    characteristics. There is an almost monotonic
    relationship between age categories and identity,
    with the two youngest strata identifying most
    strongly with the Welsh identity, decreasing in
    the 55 and older categories. In terms of
    occupational class belonging, two classes stand
    out the petty bourgeoisie, with the highest
    probability of British identity, and workers with
    conversely the highest level of Welsh identity.
  • Educationally, a similarly clear profile emerges.
    Individuals with the lowest educational
    attainment have the highest level of Welsh
    identity, following by the mid-level group.

16
Language proficiency
  • Lastly, Model III includes proficiency in Welsh
    as an additional explanatory variable. The
    effects are highly significant, as might be
    expected, with fluent and good Welsh-speakers
    manifesting a high proclivity towards Welsh
    identity, as do the intermediate and basic
    speakers, when contrasted with the non-Welsh
    speakers.
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