Book contents
- From Parchment to Practice
- Comparative Constitutional Law and Policy
- From Parchment to Practice
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction
- Part I The Problem of Transformation in Constitutional Design
- Part II The Issue of Gender
- Part III Institutional Development and the Role of Courts
- Part IV Authoritarian Transitions
- 10 Transformational Authoritarian Constitutions
- 11 Authoritarian Straitjacket or Vehicle for Democratic Transition?
- 12 The Ethiopian Constitution and Ethnic Federalism
- Index
12 - The Ethiopian Constitution and Ethnic Federalism
from Part IV - Authoritarian Transitions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2020
- From Parchment to Practice
- Comparative Constitutional Law and Policy
- From Parchment to Practice
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction
- Part I The Problem of Transformation in Constitutional Design
- Part II The Issue of Gender
- Part III Institutional Development and the Role of Courts
- Part IV Authoritarian Transitions
- 10 Transformational Authoritarian Constitutions
- 11 Authoritarian Straitjacket or Vehicle for Democratic Transition?
- 12 The Ethiopian Constitution and Ethnic Federalism
- Index
Summary
Is ethnic federalism good or bad for Ethiopia? Scholars of various kinds disagree. For some consequentialists, ethnic federalism deepens ethnic differences and leads to separatism; for others, it is preferred to the forced integration of distinctive ethnic groups and the suppression of group rights. To some constitutionalists, ethnic federalism will succeed with greater fidelity to the Ethiopian Constitution, yet others view the Constitution as limiting ethnic federalism’s efficacy. Whatever the perspective, no consensus exists on its merits. This chapter examines ethnic federalism as an institutional design mechanism to balance the tension between the Constitution’s transformational and preservative elements. Although the Constitution was initially transformational, ethnic federalism was likely the most attractive preservative institutional design mechanism for the ruling elite to maintain power. The tension became clear during the 2005 election, marking the end of the first period of transformational Ethiopian constitutionalism. The chapter views the adoption of ethnic federalism as a preservative tool consistent with the ruling elite’s incentives.
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- From Parchment to PracticeImplementing New Constitutions, pp. 281 - 302Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020