Article in Sociology · August 000 doi: 10. 1177/S0038038500000304 citations 37 reads 5,200 author
Like the Kninska Krajina, this region, Bosanska Krajina, has produced some of the most
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Ethnic Conflict
Like the Kninska Krajina, this region, Bosanska Krajina, has produced some of the most
insecure and hence militant Serbs of all. The memory of the Kozara massacre plays a central part in the people’s social psychology. The most militant are (usually) men who are unwilling to trade off ethnic preferences against other preferences and who try to impose their views on their 494
m i c h a e l ba n to n co-ethnics. (Maybe women are less prominent in mobilisation movements because they are less frequently in a position to decide trade-offs.) The mobilisers’ actions stimulate counter-actions from similar persons in opposed groups, and when each side nurses its grievances conflict escalates, especially if people on one side fail to predict how the others will react. It would appear that sometimes atrocities are perpetrated in order to accelerate processes of escalation. Individuals who have earlier been well disposed towards members of an opposed group have at times been forced to shoot members of that group just because they belonged to it. More often, it would seem, they have been ready to shoot them because they have come to feel morally obliged to retaliate for what members of the other group have done (or for what they believe them to have done). 1 In such circumstances, persons who were accustomed to neighbourly relations with others of different ethnic origin come to believe that they can be safe only when they live together with co-ethnics. Ethnic preferences override norms of neighbourliness. Local communities are then, in their internal relations, no longer multidimensional with respect to ethnicity. Mobilisers offer their services as bargaining agents. Sometimes they serve as the mouthpieces of those they lead, voicing long-held sentiments. At other times they speak for themselves, and their followers get caught up in movements over which they exercise little influence. Ethnic bargaining can occur only under certain conditions. In any but a small community the parties are best represented by agents who have the power to discipline potential dissidents. The parties must believe that the benefits to be obtained from bargaining are likely to outweigh the costs. They must also trust that any bargain can be enforced and that their concessions will not be betrayed. Bargaining has been institutionalised in countries in which different ethnic groups have a fixed number of seats in the legislature and the political elite has an interest in using state power to maintain the prevailing structure, as in the former Yugoslavia in the time of President Tito. Open conflict is an attempt to change the terms of bargaining, to break what is seen as a stalemate and force another party to negotiate about matters it refuses to regard as negotiable. Its genesis is to be found in the inadequacy of institutional arrangements for balancing incompatible prefer- ences and regulating inter-group bargaining, and, in particular, for limiting the influence of extremists. In a two-party zero-sum situation in which a benefit to one party is a cost to the other there may be no scope for bargaining unless a third party intervenes to offer a new benefit, threaten a new cost or be accepted as an arbitrator with binding powers. Some conflicts between states over the rights of ethnic minorities have been resolved by international treaties. For example, when Finland secured independence from Russia in 1917 the population of the Åland Islands wished to remain culturally Swedish although they were closer to the Finnish than to the Swedish mainland. The League of Nations negotiated an agreement guaranteeing to the Ålanders ‘the preservation of their language, of their culture, and of their local Swedish tradition’ Ethnic Conflict 495
within the Finnish state, and the conflict has dissolved. International guarantees can overcome the parties’ mistrust of one another’s future actions. The intervention in Northern Ireland of the government of the United States made a crucial difference (as in Palestine, Bosnia and Kosovo), though attempts to mediate in Cyprus have failed. Often a major obstacle is disagreement within one or both of the parties to a dispute. It may be easier to reach a settlement if negotiations are conducted in secret (as in the Oslo talks about the future of Palestine), because then the bargaining agents do not have to strike attitudes to reassure those they represent that their hopes are not being betrayed. ‘Proximity talks’ (with the parties in separate rooms) can prevent differences within delegations from spoiling negotiations between delega- tions. The conditions for effective bargaining may be present at one moment in time but if they are not then exploited they may not reappear for a generation. The 1973 opportunity in Northern Ireland did not recur until 1998.
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