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Explaining Ethnic Political Participation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 June 2011
Abstract
Most concepts of ethnicity are unsuitable for political analysis because they ignore either subjective or objective aspects, and because they ignore the fluid and situational nature of ethnicity. The approach flowing from the concept proposed here permits the observer to examine empirical variations that tend to be treated as rigid assumptions by modernization analysts on the one hand and class analysts on the other. The concept is applied to a study of the Nubians of Uganda because of the intermixture of class and ethnic features involved in their fall from status at the beginning of the colonial period and their subsequent sudden rise following the 1071 coup d'état of Idi Amin. The fairly recent creation of the Nubians as an ethnic category and the relative ease with which others can become members illustrate other features of the proposed concept of ethnicity. Finally, this concept is used to examine and criticize overly restrictive notions of ethnicity found in theories based upon both cultural pluralism and consociationalism.
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References
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50 Pain, (fn. 34), 19.Google Scholar Nubians also formed the only unit all of whose members could speak Swahili, which has always been the official language of the Ugandan Army. They did poorly, relative to other ethnic categories, in the number of respondents who could speak English well—a further indication of their low access to formal education.
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Lijphart left himself open to this sort of interpretation by referring approvingly to“a kind of voluntary apartheid policy as the best solution for a divided society,” in his argument that separation of subcultures may reduce conflict (fn. 54), 83.
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60 There is evidence that political disagreements produced demands among those objectively identified as Ibos that the 1975 panel considering the number of new states divide the old East Central state into four new ones. Daily Times (Lagos), June 27, 1977. p. 3.
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