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Inclusion in Post-Conflict Legislatures: The Kosovo and Northern Ireland Assemblies

Autor Michael Potter
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 sep 2020
“An excellent analysis of the complex dynamics of inclusion in post-conflict societies: theoretically grounded, empirically rich, and with a well-informed set of policy-relevant insights and recommendations with implications far beyond the cases of Kosovo and Northern Ireland.”
Stefan Wolff, University of Birmingham, UK

“Does the promotion of political accommodation between the contending parties in an ethno-nationalist conflict disadvantage other groups in society? This important question is at the heart of Michael Potter's nuanced study of post-settlement parliaments in Kosovo and Northern Ireland, in which he probes their record of representativeness, focusing on gender and ethnicity. His meticulous research, drawing on extensive fieldwork, shows that the domination of the parliaments by parties aligned to the conflict does indeed tend to marginalise other identities. His findings provide plenty of food for thought for practitioners in the field of conflict resolution. In particular, they underline the need for care in the design of institutional arrangements for deeply divided societies, so as to minimise potentially negative consequences that priority for accommodation and reconciliation may have for other issues and for the practice of inclusion.”
Adrian Guelke, Queen’s University Belfast, UK

“Identity is a central organising principle of politics in the 21st century. In this impressive book Michael Potter shows that a focus on gender and minority ethnic identities in newly-formed post-conflict assemblies provides a unique litmus test of the robustness of democratic politics. He analyses the cases of Kosovo and Northern Ireland with rigour and considerable insight. This book makes a highly original and lasting contribution to theory and practice in post-conflict settings world-wide.”
Yvonne Galligan, Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland

This book examines inclusion in post-conflict legislatures, using Northern Ireland and Kosovo as case studies and gender and minority ethnicity as indicators. The analysis uses an adapted framework developed by Yvonne Galligan and Sara Clavero to measure inclusion across a range of factors associated with deliberative democratic principles. The logic is that political systems designed to accommodate communities in conflict will prioritise certain identities over others. The aim of the book is to investigate how identities not directly associated with a conflict fare in a political system designed to manage identities in conflict. The book looks comparatively at the conflicts in Kosovo and Northern Ireland, then discusses approaches to conflict management, describing how political institutions were designed in those contexts. The themes of women and minority identities in those conflicts are then explored with a view to examining the extent of inclusion in the Northern Ireland and Kosovo Assemblies.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783030255381
ISBN-10: 3030255387
Pagini: 310
Ilustrații: XIV, 310 p. 1 illus.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2020
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

Chapter 1 Introduction.- Chapter 2 Northern Ireland and Kosovo in Comparative Perspective.- Chapter 3 Post-Conflict Institutional Design in Northern Ireland and Kosovo.- Chapter 4 The Nature of Representation.- Chapter 5 Gender and Politics in Northern Ireland and Kosovo.- Chapter 6 Gender and Inclusion in Northern Ireland and Kosovo.- Chapter 7 Ethnicity in Northern Ireland and Kosovo.- Chapter 8 Ethnicity and Inclusion.- Chapter 9 Conclusion.

Notă biografică

Michael Potter is Visiting Research Fellow at Queen’s University Belfast, UK. Michael has published book chapters and articles in academic journals on the transition from conflict, women and peacebuilding and conflict, minority identities in Northern Ireland and Kosovo and Irish Travellers.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

“An excellent analysis of the complex dynamics of inclusion in post-conflict societies: theoretically grounded, empirically rich, and with a well-informed set of policy-relevant insights and recommendations with implications far beyond the cases of Kosovo and Northern Ireland.”
Stefan Wolff, University of Birmingham, UK

“Does the promotion of political accommodation between the contending parties in an ethno-nationalist conflict disadvantage other groups in society?  This important question is at the heart of Michael Potter's nuanced study of post-settlement parliaments in Kosovo and Northern Ireland, in which he probes their record of representativeness, focusing on gender and ethnicity.  His meticulous research, drawing on extensive fieldwork, shows that the domination of the parliaments by parties aligned to the conflict does indeed tend to marginalise other identities. His findings provide plenty of food for thought for practitioners in the field of conflict resolution.”
Adrian Guelke, Queen’s University Belfast, UK

“Identity is a central organising principle of politics in the 21st century. In this impressive book Michael Potter shows that a focus on gender and minority ethnic identities in newly-formed post-conflict assemblies provides a unique litmus test of the robustness of democratic politics. He analyses the cases of Kosovo and Northern Ireland with rigour and considerable insight. This book makes a highly original and lasting contribution to theory and practice in post-conflict settings world-wide.”
Yvonne Galligan, Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland

This book examines inclusion in post-conflict legislatures, using Northern Ireland and Kosovo as case studies and gender and minority ethnicity as indicators. The analysis uses an adapted framework developed by Yvonne Galligan and Sara Clavero to measure inclusion across a range of factors associated with deliberative democratic principles. The logic is that political systems designed to accommodate communities in conflict will prioritise certain identities over others. The aim of the book is to investigate how identities not directly associated with a conflict fare in a political system designed to manage identities in conflict. 

Michael Potter is Visiting Research Fellow at Queen’s University Belfast, UK.

Caracteristici

Examines the dominance of the conflict paradigm in post-conflict political institutions Explores gender and minority ethnicity in Northern Ireland and Kosovo during conflict and in the post-conflict political environment Further develops and operationalizes an analytical framework to measure inclusion in political systems