Guide to Citizens’ Rights and Responsibilities
part of the territory rose in rebellion in 1904, and the Germans suppressed
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- G O V E R N M E N T S O F T H E W O R L D 163 F A S T F A C T S
- G O V E R N M E N T S O F T H E W O R L D N a m i b i a apartheid
- K A L A H A R I D E S E R T Ca pr i v i Strip Cape Dernberg Wreck
- Windhoek Rundu Katima Mulilo A N G O L A Z A M B I A B O T S W A N A S O U T H A F R I C A
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- See also: Peacekeeping Forces; South Africa; United Nations. B I B L I O G R A P H Y
- National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) See
- T H E O R I E S A N D D E B AT E S
- G O V E R N M E N T S O F T H E W O R L D N a t i o n a l i s t M o v e m e n t s ethnic cleansing
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- G O V E R N M E N T S O F T H E W O R L D N a t i o n a l i s t M o v e m e n t s self-determination
part of the territory rose in rebellion in 1904, and the Germans suppressed
them in a genocidal war that resulted in perhaps two-thirds of the Herero and half the Nama people of the south losing their lives. In World War I (1914–1918) the Germans were ousted from Namibia by the South Africans, allies of the British, and South African occupation then continued from 1915 until the independence of Namibia in March 1990. For this extended period the territory was ruled as a de facto colony of South Africa, which would have annexed the territory had it been allowed to do so. Instead, Namibia became a mandate under the League of Nations in 1921, and from 1946, when the new United Nations ( UN) refused to allow South Africa to incorporate the territory, the UN assumed some responsibility for it. ■ ■ ■ G O V E R N M E N T S O F T H E W O R L D 163 F A S T F A C T S The Caprivi Strip is a finger of land in north- east Namibia that was annexed to the country to allow the German rulers to access to the Zambezi River. ■ ■ ■ When South Africa refused to withdraw, the issue went to the International Court of Justice ( ICJ) in The Hague. When the court there did not find in favor of South Africa’s withdrawal, the UN General Assembly terminated the mandate in 1966 and began a process that led to the Namibian issue being taken up by the Security Council, which referred the matter back to the ICJ. In 1971 the ICJ ruled that South African rule was illegal and South Africa must withdraw. It took almost two decades for that to be accomplished, during which a major liberation war was fought by the South West African People’s Organization (SWAPO). Not only was the South African rule extremely oppressive and brutal, and its last phase highly militaristic, but the majority of the population lived in great poverty. In 1978 South Africa was persuaded to agree to a plan for a transition to independence involving the UN, and a decade later—by which time the war with SWAPO had extended far into Angola—finally agreed to its implementation. A UN presence helped ensure that the first democratic election held in the territory in November 1989 was reasonably free and fair. When a SWAPO government took office at independence, it faced the prob- lems left by over a century of colonialism and decades of apartheid rule and war. The main port, Walvis Bay, remained under South African rule until it was incorporated in 1994. Although SWAPO was not known for commitment to democratic practice, under the influence of the international community, which 164 G O V E R N M E N T S O F T H E W O R L D N a m i b i a apartheid: an official policy of racial segrega- tion in the Republic of South Africa with a goal of promoting and maintaining white domination ■ ■ ■ K A L A H A R I D E S E R T Ca pr i v i Strip Cape Dernberg Wreck Point S k e l e t o n C o a s t N A M I B D E S E R T N A M I B D E S E R T K a o k o V e l d K a u k a u V e l d Okavango Swamps Etosha Pan Kunene C u ba ngo C uit o Za m be zi Ch ob e Om ata ko Eiseb Ug ab N o ss o b A u ob F is h Orange ATLANTIC OCEAN S a n d w i c h B a y C o n c e p t i o n B a y H o t t e n t o t B a y Walvis Bay Oshakati Grootfontein Tsumkwe Otavi Outjo Omaruru Karibib Okahandja Rehoboth Mariental Maltahöhe Bethanien Aroab Lüderitz Karasburg Oranjemund Ondangwa Epembe Tsumeb Otjiwarongo Swakopmund Gobabis Mamuno Epukiro Khakhea Bokspits Ghanzi Tsau Bagani Luiana Neriquinha Maun Keetmanshoop Windhoek Rundu Katima Mulilo A N G O L A Z A M B I A B O T S W A N A S O U T H A F R I C A Namibia W S N E NAMIBIA 300 Miles 0 0 300 Kilometers 225 75 150 225 75 150 Ok avango Konigstein Pk. 8,550 ft. 2606 m. (MAP BY MARYLAND CARTOGRAPHICS/ THE GALE GROUP) had played a very important role in bringing Namibia to independence, the con- stitution approved by the elected Constituent Assembly prior to independence was a liberal democratic one, providing for an elected president and multiparty system. However, after taking office, the SWAPO government has tended to rule in an authoritarian manner, in part a legacy of the years of exile and armed struggle. SWAPO has not been challenged by any effective opposition because the main opposition party, the Democratic Turnhalle Alliance, was regarded by many as having been a South African puppet, and the great majority of the Ovambo-speaking people support SWAPO. Although the original constitution limited the presidency to two terms, the first president, the founder of SWAPO, Sam Nujoma ( b. 1929), persuaded his party to allow him to continue for a third term, and the constitution was changed to permit this. In March 2005, Hifikepunye Pohamba ( b. 1935), also a founding member of SWAPO and Nujoma’s handpicked successor, was sworn in as the country’s second president. The opposition remains small and divided between the Democratic Turnhalle Alliance and the Congress of Democrats, and parliament is ineffective. A group of people from the northeastern Caprivi region who tried to stage an uprising in 1998 in support of secession was quickly detained and in 2004 remained on trial for treason. Some allege that they were tortured. Although its mineral wealth brings the country considerable revenue, the bulk of the population remains very impoverished and the prevalence rate of HIV/AIDS is one of the highest in the world. Nevertheless the country is known for its free press, which has recently criticized aspects of the government’s policy to redress the unequal land distribution by embarking on a land reform program involving expropriation of white-owned farms. The judicial system remains inde- pendent of government and committed to the upholding of the basic freedoms enshrined in the constitution. Whether a democratic culture is taking root among the mass of the people remains to be seen, but compared to the repression and lack of freedom under the apartheid regime, the country since independence has enjoyed an era of great stability in which citizens have by and large enjoyed a large measure of freedom. See also: Peacekeeping Forces; South Africa; United Nations. B I B L I O G R A P H Y Hopwood, Graham. Guide to Namibian Politics. Windhoek, Namibia: Institute for Public Policy Research, 2004. Melber, Henning ed. Re-examining Liberation in Namibia: Political Culture Since Independence. Uppsala, Sweden: Nordiska Afrikainstitutet, 2003. Nujoma, Sam. Where Others Wavered. London: Panaf Books, 2003. Christopher Saunders National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) See Civil Rights Movement in the United States. G O V E R N M E N T S O F T H E W O R L D 165 N a t i o n a l A s s o c i a t i o n f o r t h e A d v a n c e m e n t o f C o l o r e d P e o p l e ( N A A C P ) authoritarianism: the domination of the state or its leader over individuals ■ ■ ■ secede: to break away from, especially politically redress: to make right, or, compensation expropriate: to take property from its owner and give it to another, especially oneself; usually accomplished through government decree or legal procedures Nationalist Movements A nationalist movement is a social and political movement for obtaining and maintaining national identity and autonomy among a group of people that some of its members consider a nation. The underlying principle of its motivating ideology, nationalism, is to uphold national interest or national identity as the primary basis on which political decisions are made. Most historians agree that, as an ideology, nationalism became prevalent in North America and Western Europe in the latter half of the eighteenth century, and shortly thereafter in Latin America. The first wave of nationalist movements reached its peak during the 1848 revolutions in Europe, which led to the unifi- cation of Germany and Italy. Toward the end of the nineteenth century a second wave swept Eastern and Northern Europe, as well as Japan, India, Armenia, and Egypt. Soon nationalist movements spread to most of Asia and parts of Africa. In the twentieth century nationalist movements became a global phenomenon. In many instances, such as the anticolonial struggles in Latin America, Asia, and Africa, nationalist movements were a progressive force. However, nationalist movements also led to some of the darkest moments in modern history, such as the rise of fascism in Europe during the 1930s and ethnic cleansing in the former Yugoslavia during the 1990s. The early theorists of nationalism highlighted the crucial role of sentiments in modern politics as well as the importance of preexisting traditions such as race, language, and culture. Later European nationalists reacted to industrializa- tion and linked the economic aspect of a nation’s life to its culture and politics, thus making nationalism a more powerful ideology. Nationalism’s appeal is based on the perception of individuals as an integral part of a community who cannot be defined in isolation from this community, rather than as independent and self-sufficient people. Such a viewpoint provides ample justification for a nationalist movement and its perceived uniqueness. T H E O R I E S A N D D E B AT E S Nationalism and nationalist movements did not become the subject of his- torical enquiry until the mid-nineteenth century, or of social scientific analysis until the early twentieth century. In the wake of the widespread nationalist move- ments of decolonization in Africa and Asia in the 1950s and 1960s, many models and theories of nationalism emerged with the premise that nations and national- ism are intrinsic to modernity. These theories perceive the nation as the creation of a distinctively modernizing, industrial, and capitalist West, and the product of specific social, economic, bureaucratic, and technological innovations. During the decades that followed, the “ modernist ” view of nationalism was further developed and refined as scholars redefined the nation as a purely intel- lectual construct. The fundamental premise of this kind of theory is challenged by “ primordialists ,” who point to modernism’s failure to grasp the recurring nature of ethnic ties and to ground its understanding of modern nations in his- tory and earlier traditions. They argue that the power of ethnicity and ethnic history is crucial to understanding the modern nation-state, and the modern nation-state would simply not exist without ethnic foundations, even though such foundations are often idealized. These theorists hold that ethnicity, although mutable and constantly evolving, limits the degree to which a given cultural identity may be transformed. In this sense, it is not a mere fiction and cannot be expected to vanish gradually as a result of modernization. 166 G O V E R N M E N T S O F T H E W O R L D N a t i o n a l i s t M o v e m e n t s ethnic cleansing: the systematic murder of an entire ethnic group ■ ■ ■ modernism: a philosophy advocating ideas and elements specific to modern times, or the integration of those ideas into preexisting cul- tures or beliefs primordialism: a way of studying national- ism that advocates looking at familial and ethnic connections and their relation to underlying conflicts Over the years the differences between the modernists and primordialists seem to have narrowed, at least among leading voices. At the same time, some argue that both intellectual camps have adopted a perspective emphasizing historical progress and the necessary development of nation-states that has, in fact, become an impediment to understanding non-Western national conscious- ness and new forms of modern community. C O N T E M P O R A R Y C H A L L E N G E S It is widely recognized that nationalism has both a positive and negative side. A nation may be democratic, inclusive, secular , and forward-looking, or authoritarian , exclusionary, religious, and backward-looking. Similarly, national- ist movements may be progressive, such as many anticolonial struggles, or viru- lent, such as ethnic cleansing. Well-known leaders of nationalist movements include not only the chief proponent of nonviolence, India’s Mahatma Gandhi (1869–1948), but also Nazi Germany’s Adolf Hitler (1889–1945), brutal Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu (1918–1989), and the former Yugoslavia’s strongman, Slobodan Milosevic (b. 1941). G O V E R N M E N T S O F T H E W O R L D 167 N a t i o n a l i s t M o v e m e n t s FILING PAST THE HO CHI MINH MAUSOLEUM, BUDDHIST MONKS TAKE PART IN VIETNAM’S INDEPENDENCE DAY PARADE IN HANOI ON SEPTEMBER 2, 2000. Reunification Day is a national holiday commemorating the day North Vietnamese took control of Saigon on April 30, 1975, bringing the Vietnam War to a close. (SOURCE: © AP/WIDE WORLD PHOTOS) secularism: a refutation of, apathy toward, or exclusion of all religion authoritarianism: the domination of the state or its leader over individuals ■ ■ ■ Some scholars believe that Western European nationalism began as predom- inantly liberal and democratic, whereas Eastern nationalism has fundamental and pervasive tendencies toward “authoritarianism.” According to this binary view of nationalism, nationalism can be divided into two categories: civic nationalism and ethnic nationalism. Civic nationalism defines national membership in terms of adherence to democratic principles, whereas ethnic nationalism defines national membership in terms of the more exclusionary categories of ethnicity and culture. In practice, however, these types are often closely intertwined, and sometimes it is not difficult to move from one version to another as circum- stances change. Moreover, diffusion of a common language and national culture occurs even in the most liberal democracies. Many have suggested that there is little intellectual content behind national- ism, and hence its historical manifestations cannot be fully understood unless placed in the context of major political traditions such as liberalism , conservatism, and Marxism. Despite the fact that most of these political traditions relegated nationalism to a secondary position, nationalism has demonstrated astounding resilience through centuries of political turmoil. Many philosophers, such as Karl Marx and John Stuart Mill, have tried to explain away nationalism and failed. This makes the relationship between nationalism and liberalism, the political ideology on which the ideas of liberal democracy and universal human rights are based, a particularly important theoretical and practical issue in the contemporary world. Liberalism’s core ideas, such as the beliefs that the individual is the primary political actor, that the state is the exclusive arena for civic identification, and that individuals should be granted a set of rights guaranteeing freedom and equality which the state must not take away, seem radically incompatible with nationalist movements that demand complete loyalty and partiality, and prioritize national interests over individual rights. Liberalism’s universalist outlook has always made the matter of national and other boundaries problematic: Liberals tend to either assume the nation-state exists as an arena for justice and democratic principles without properly theorizing it, or try to justify particular boundaries from univer- sal premises. Thus, many liberals have long regarded nationalism as “irrational” and hence a subject unworthy of serious scholarly attention. Nevertheless, liberal institutions and practices developed within the frame- work of the nation-state. Even during the early days of nationalism, liberal political thinkers advocated nationalist movements to achieve political unity in countries such as Germany and Italy, and invoked nationalist sentiments whenever they perceived that the interest of their country was at stake. In his Fourteen Points of 1918, submitted at the conclusion of World War I, U.S. President Woodrow S. Wilson (1856–1924) offered the principle of national self-determination as the liberal answer to the question of national sovereignty . This principle was further institutionalized in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, formulated by the United Nations (UN) in 1948. It provided a standard for nation building after both world wars, as well as during the process of decolonization in the Third World. Although its language is somewhat abstract and ambiguous, the declaration’s core meaning remains incontrovertible and simple to grasp: “the belief that each nation has a right to constitute an independent state and determine its own govern- ment.” The liberal principle of national self-determination became one of the most influential ideas of the twenty-first century. During much of the Cold War, nationalist movements were often overshad- owed by the power struggles between the United States and the former Soviet Union. The end of the Cold War once again pushed the question of national 168 G O V E R N M E N T S O F T H E W O R L D N a t i o n a l i s t M o v e m e n t s self-determination: the ability of a people to determine their own destiny or political system sovereignty: autonomy; or, rule over a politi- cal entity liberalism: a political philosophy advocating individual rights, positive government action, and social justice, or, an economic philosophy advocating individual freedoms and free markets ■ ■ ■ “. . . nationalism has demonstrated astounding resilience amidst centuries of political turmoil.” ■ ■ ■ sovereignty into the foreground of international politics. From 1991 to the end of 1992 three former communist multiethnic states—Yugoslavia, the Soviet Union, and Czechoslovakia—disintegrated, producing more than twenty successor states. With communism no longer a viable political force across the globe, it appears that the entire postcommunist world is experiencing a revival of nationalist movements. Such movements in the Middle East, Asia, and Africa pose serious threats to regional stability and security. These developments chal- lenge the notion that liberalism is the only game in town and have resulted in a burgeoning literature on “liberal nationalism.” Acknowledging that the nation-state is here to stay, liberal nationalists offer a variety of reasons why nation-states are the appropriate outgrowth of liberal political theory. They argue that the liberal state is, in fact, critically dependent for its unity and stability on civil bonds, which existed before political ties, that can only be provided through national attachments. When citizens assume a national identity, it serves to both legitimize the state’s protection of citizens’ rights and provide the cultural environment in which liberal rights might be exercised. In general, liberal nationalists advocate political and cultural tolerance. They oppose coercive means to promote a common national identity and are tolerant of political activities that might yield a different national character. Liberal nationalism typically entails a more open definition of the nation, with the membership of the nation being more inclusive. Giving explicit recognition to the fact that the bonds between individuals are rooted in a social context, liberal nationalism has had significant implications for politics in contemporary multina- tional liberal states, as it provides justification for the rights of some groups and the preservation of minority cultures. In broader theoretical and political terms, however, liberal nationalism pro- vokes more questions than it answers. Although it accepts the notion that a person is part of a multiplicity of communities and collectives, liberal nationalism assumes that the same individual can always distance him or herself from any such label, and in that sense endorse or criticize it. This perception of an individual’s sense of national identity as the outcome of rational and critical reflection clearly contradicts most nationalists’ view of national identity as a product of cultural or historical factors. Moreover, for liberal nationalists, national identity is only one of Download 4.77 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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