权力分享对种族显著性的长期影响

IF 3.4 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Andreas Juon
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引用次数: 0

摘要

权力分享是会降低还是会提高种族显著性?借鉴社会心理学,我发现了两种相反的机制,有助于调和之前对立的研究结果。首先,长期的权力分享实践会削弱群体间的不平等。因此,它们会逐渐降低种族身份作为 "经验法则 "的效用,并降低其显著性。其次,个人长期生活在种族差异化的权力分享体制下,会使种族身份更容易获得,从而提高其显著性。为了验证这些预期,我利用了迄今为止有关种族显著性的实证文献中所使用的最广泛的大规模调查,包括来自 132 个国家的 900,000 多名受访者。我的研究表明,权力分享会影响个人的自我认同和投票意向,这与我的论点不谋而合。由于我的研究结果是基于在群体和群体-年份层面纳入固定效应的规格,因此它们不太可能是内生的,因为权力分享首先是提供给那些身份最突出的群体。我的研究结果对分裂社会中和平制度化的努力以及有关种族冲突的文献都具有重要意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The long-term consequences of power-sharing for ethnic salience
Does power-sharing reduce or increase ethnic salience? Drawing on social psychology, I identify two countervailing mechanisms that help reconcile previously opposed findings. First, prolonged power-sharing practices attenuate between-group inequalities. Thereby, they gradually reduce the usefulness of ethnic identities as ‘rules of thumb’ and decrease their salience. Second, extended periods during which individuals live under ethnically differentiated power-sharing institutions render ethnic identities more accessible and thereby increase their salience. To test these expectations, I rely on the most extensive collection of mass surveys used in the empirical literature on ethnic salience so far, encompassing more than 900,000 respondents from a total of 132 countries. I show that power-sharing affects individuals’ self-identification and vote intentions in accordance with my arguments. As my findings are based on specifications that incorporate fixed effects at the group- and group-year levels, they are unlikely to be endogenous to the provision of power-sharing to groups whose identities are most salient in the first place. My findings have important implications for efforts to institutionalize peace in divided societies and for the literature on ethnic conflict.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
5.60%
发文量
80
期刊介绍: Journal of Peace Research is an interdisciplinary and international peer reviewed bimonthly journal of scholarly work in peace research. Edited at the International Peace Research Institute, Oslo (PRIO), by an international editorial committee, Journal of Peace Research strives for a global focus on conflict and peacemaking. From its establishment in 1964, authors from over 50 countries have published in JPR. The Journal encourages a wide conception of peace, but focuses on the causes of violence and conflict resolution. Without sacrificing the requirements for theoretical rigour and methodological sophistication, articles directed towards ways and means of peace are favoured.
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