"This volume presents leading perspectives on how liberal states can balance between conflicting interests of majority and minority groups, so that they can live together in mutual respect. The last decade's events are an alarming reminder of how conflicts over majority and minority relations can shake democracy at its foundations"--
The design of democratic institutions includes a variety of barriers to protect against the tyranny of the majority, including international human rights, cultural minority rights, and multiculturalism. In the twenty-first century, majorities have re-asserted themselves, sometimes reasonably, referring to social cohesion and national identity, at other times in the form of populist movements challenging core foundations of liberal democracy. This volume intervenes in this debate by examining the legitimacy of conflicting majority and minority claims. Are majorities a legal concept, holding rights and subject to limitations? How can we define a sense of nationhood that brings groups together rather than tears them apart? In this volume, world-leading experts are brought together for the first time to debate the rights of both majorities and minorities. The outcome is a fascinating exchange on one of the greatest challenges facing liberal democracies today.
The last decade's events are an alarming reminder of how conflicts over majority and minority relations can shake democracy to its foundations. This volume presents unique insights on how liberal states can balance conflicting interests of majority and minority groups, so that they can live together with mutual respect.
Papildus informācija
A thought-provoking dialogue on majority and minority rights among world-leading scholars.
Introduction Charles Taylor;
1. Majority-minority constellations:
Towards a group-differentiated approach Ruud Koopmans, Liav Orgad;
2. Are
there any cultural majority rights? Rainer Bauböck;
3. Identity not culture:
Where ethnic majorities are disadvantaged Eric Kaufmann;
4. Nationhood,
multiculturalism, and the ethics of membership Will Kymlicka;
5. Reconciling
the cultural claims of majorities and minorities Michael Da Silva, Daniel M.
Weinstock;
6. Linking minority rights and majority attitudes: Multicultural
patriotism Clara Sandelind;
7. The Liberalism of fear: The second coming Yael
Tamir;
8. Multiculturalism without privileging liberalism Tariq Modood;
9.
Why every nation should nurture (a thick and inclusive) nationalism Maya
Tudor;
10. Populism and cultural majority rights: An uneasy relationship
Christian Joppke;
11. Legitimate populism and liberal overreach David
Goodhart;
12. The causes of populism and the problem of cultural majority
rights Daniel Ziblatt.
Liav Orgad is an international researcher working at the European University Institute in Florence, WZB Berlin Social Science Center, Peking University School of Transnational Law, and Reichman University in Israel. Ruud Koopmans is Research Director at the WZB Berlin Social Science Center, and Professor of Sociology at Berlin's Humboldt University.