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The Challenge of Sustaining Democracy in Deeply Divided Societies : Citizenship, Rights, and Ethnic Conflicts in India and Israel

Part of the Studies in Public Policy series
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In this book, Harel-Shalev analyzes public policy and governmental features in procedurally democratic states that govern deeply divided societies.

The book traces the political formula that enables such states to survive while sustaining a democratic process in the face of religious, ethnic, and national conflicts.

It investigates citizenship discourses, analyzes the mechanisms political regimes use to give rights to minorities while simultaneously limiting their power, and illustrates how this unique political formula can be applied in two case studies of vastly different countries-Israel and India.

The analogous conflicts in India and Israel that threaten the survival of democracy-the ethno-religious conflict between Hindus and Muslims in India and the ethno-national conflict between Jews and Arab-Palestinians in Israel-are analyzed in depth.

In addition, the core cases of India and Israel, states in which democracy has survived for over sixty years, are compared with two additional countries where democracy was short-lived. This issue is especially pertinent to the world today, as many young nations currently in the process of state building are coping with the challenges inherent in building democratic institutions in plural and polarized societies.

The book explores the inherent tension between the conflicting logics of democracy, citizenship, and nation-state, and suggests enhanced tools for investigating societies in which this tension exists.

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Product Details
Lexington Books
0739126849 / 9780739126844
Hardback
321.8
04/08/2010
United States
514 pages
163 x 241 mm, 934 grams