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The Fundamentals Of Armenian Identity Or Who Is An Armenian?

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    Re: The Fundamentals Of Armenian Identity Or Who Is An Armenian?

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    The Enduring Power of Ethnic Nationalism

    By Jerry Z. Muller

    Foreign Affairs , March/April 2008

    ----------------------------------------------------------------

    THE BALANCE SHEET

    Analysts of ethnic disaggregation typically focus on its destructive
    effects, which is understandable given the direct human suffering it
    has often entailed. But such attitudes can yield a distorted
    perspective by overlooking the less obvious costs and also the
    important benefits that ethnic separation has brought.

    Economists from Adam Smith onward, for example, have argued that the
    efficiencies of competitive markets tend to increase with the markets'
    size. The dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire into smaller
    nation-states, each with its own barriers to trade, was thus
    economically irrational and contributed to the region's travails in
    the interwar period. Much of subsequent European history has involved
    attempts to overcome this and other economic fragmentation,
    culminating in the EU.

    Ethnic disaggregation also seems to have deleterious effects on
    cultural vitality. Precisely because most of their citizens share a
    common cultural and linguistic heritage, the homogenized states of
    postwar Europe have tended to be more culturally insular than their
    demographically diverse predecessors. With few Jews in Europe and few
    Germans in Prague, that is, there are fewer Franz Kafkas.

    Forced migrations generally penalize the expelling countries and
    reward the receiving ones. Expulsion is often driven by a majority
    group's resentment of a minority group's success, on the mistaken
    assumption that achievement is a zero-sum game. But countries that got
    rid of their Armenians, Germans, Greeks, Jews, and other successful
    minorities deprived themselves of some of their most talented
    citizens, who simply took their skills and knowledge elsewhere. And in
    many places, the triumph of ethnonational politics has meant the
    victory of traditionally rural groups over more urbanized ones, which
    possess just those skills desirable in an advanced industrial economy.

    But if ethnonationalism has frequently led to tension and conflict, it
    has also proved to be a source of cohesion and stability. When French
    textbooks began with "Our ancestors the Gauls" or when Churchill spoke
    to wartime audiences of "this island race," they appealed to
    ethnonationalist sensibilities as a source of mutual trust and
    sacrifice. Liberal democracy and ethnic homogeneity are not only
    compatible; they can be complementary.

    One could argue that Europe has been so harmonious since World War II
    not because of the failure of ethnic nationalism but because of its
    success, which removed some of the greatest sources of conflict both
    within and between countries. The fact that ethnic and state
    boundaries now largely coincide has meant that there are fewer
    disputes over borders or expatriate communities, leading to the most
    stable territorial configuration in European history.

    These ethnically homogeneous polities have displayed a great deal of
    internal solidarity, moreover, facilitating government programs,
    including domestic transfer payments, of various kinds. When the
    Swedish Social Democrats were developing plans for Europe's most
    extensive welfare state during the interwar period, the political
    scientist Sheri Berman has noted, they conceived of and sold them as
    the construction of a folkhemmet, or "people's home."

    Several decades of life in consolidated, ethnically homogeneous states
    may even have worked to sap ethnonationalism's own emotional
    power. Many Europeans are now prepared, and even eager, to participate
    in transnational frameworks such as the EU, in part because their
    perceived need for collective self-determination has largely been
    satisfied.




    NEW ETHNIC MIXING

    Along with the process of forced ethnic disaggregation over the last
    two centuries, there has also been a process of ethnic mixing brought
    about by voluntary emigration. The general pattern has been one of
    emigration from poor, stagnant areas to richer and more dynamic ones.

    In Europe, this has meant primarily movement west and north, leading
    above all to France and the United Kingdom. This pattern has continued
    into the present: as a result of recent migration, for example, there
    are now half a million Poles in Great Britain and 200,000 in
    Ireland. Immigrants from one part of Europe who have moved to another
    and ended up staying there have tended to assimilate and, despite some
    grumbling about a supposed invasion of "Polish plumbers," have created
    few significant problems.

    The most dramatic transformation of European ethnic balances in recent
    decades has come from the immigration of people of Asian, African, and
    Middle Eastern origin, and here the results have been mixed. Some of
    these groups have achieved remarkable success, such as the Indian
    Hindus who have come to the United Kingdom. But in Belgium, France,
    Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and elsewhere,
    on balance the educational and economic progress of Muslim immigrants
    has been more limited and their cultural alienation greater.

    How much of the problem can be traced to discrimination, how much to
    the cultural patterns of the immigrants themselves, and how much to
    the policies of European governments is difficult to determine. But a
    number of factors, from official multiculturalism to generous welfare
    states to the ease of contact with ethnic homelands, seem to have made
    it possible to create ethnic islands where assimilation into the
    larger culture and economy is limited.

    As a result, some of the traditional contours of European politics
    have been upended. The left, for example, has tended to embrace
    immigration in the name of egalitarianism and multiculturalism. But if
    there is indeed a link between ethnic homogeneity and a population's
    willingness to support generous income-redistribution programs, the
    encouragement of a more heterogeneous society may end up undermining
    the left's broader political agenda. And some of Europe's libertarian
    cultural propensities have already clashed with the cultural
    illiberalism of some of the new immigrant communities.

    Should Muslim immigrants not assimilate and instead develop a strong
    communal identification along religious lines, one consequence might
    be a resurgence of traditional ethnonational identities in some states
    -- or the development of a new European identity defined partly in
    contradistinction to Islam (with the widespread resistance to the
    extension of full EU membership to Turkey being a possible harbinger
    of such a shift).




    FUTURE IMPLICATIONS

    Since ethnonationalism is a direct consequence of key elements of
    modernization, it is likely to gain ground in societies undergoing
    such a process. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that it remains
    among the most vital -- and most disruptive -- forces in many parts of
    the contemporary world.

    More or less subtle forms of ethnonationalism, for example, are
    ubiquitous in immigration policy around the globe. Many countries --
    including Armenia, Bulgaria, Croatia, Finland, Germany, Hungary,
    Ireland, Israel, Serbia, and Turkey -- provide automatic or rapid
    citizenship to the members of diasporas of their own dominant ethnic
    group, if desired. Chinese immigration law gives priority and benefits
    to overseas Chinese. Portugal and Spain have immigration policies that
    favor applicants from their former colonies in the New World. Still
    other states, such as Japan and Slovakia, provide official forms of
    identification to members of the dominant national ethnic group who
    are noncitizens that permit them to live and work in the
    country. Americans, accustomed by the U.S. government's official
    practices to regard differential treatment on the basis of ethnicity
    to be a violation of universalist norms, often consider such policies
    exceptional, if not abhorrent. Yet in a global context, it is the
    insistence on universalist criteria that seems provincial.

    Increasing communal consciousness and shifting ethnic balances are
    bound to have a variety of consequences, both within and between
    states, in the years to come. As economic globalization brings more
    states into the global economy, for example, the first fruits of that
    process will often fall to those ethnic groups best positioned by
    history or culture to take advantage of the new opportunities for
    enrichment, deepening social cleavages rather than filling them
    in. Wealthier and higher-achieving regions might try to separate
    themselves from poorer and lower-achieving ones, and distinctive
    homogeneous areas might try to acquire sovereignty -- courses of
    action that might provoke violent responses from defenders of the
    status quo.

    Of course, there are multiethnic societies in which ethnic
    consciousness remains weak, and even a more strongly developed sense
    of ethnicity may lead to political claims short of
    sovereignty. Sometimes, demands for ethnic autonomy or
    self-determination can be met within an existing state. The claims of
    the Catalans in Spain, the Flemish in Belgium, and the Scots in the
    United Kingdom have been met in this manner, at least for now. But
    such arrangements remain precarious and are subject to recurrent
    renegotiation. In the developing world, accordingly, where states are
    more recent creations and where the borders often cut across ethnic
    boundaries, there is likely to be further ethnic disaggregation and
    communal conflict. And as scholars such as Chaim Kaufmann have noted,
    once ethnic antagonism has crossed a certain threshold of violence,
    maintaining the rival groups within a single polity becomes far more
    difficult.

    This unfortunate reality creates dilemmas for advocates of
    humanitarian intervention in such conflicts, because making and
    keeping peace between groups that have come to hate and fear one
    another is likely to require costly ongoing military missions rather
    than relatively cheap temporary ones. When communal violence escalates
    to ethnic cleansing, moreover, the return of large numbers of refugees
    to their place of origin after a cease-fire has been reached is often
    impractical and even undesirable, for it merely sets the stage for a
    further round of conflict down the road.

    Partition may thus be the most humane lasting solution to such intense
    communal conflicts. It inevitably creates new flows of refugees, but
    at least it deals with the problem at issue. The challenge for the
    international community in such cases is to separate communities in
    the most humane manner possible: by aiding in transport, assuring
    citizenship rights in the new homeland, and providing financial aid
    for resettlement and economic absorption. The bill for all of this
    will be huge, but it will rarely be greater than the material costs of
    interjecting and maintaining a foreign military presence large enough
    to pacify the rival ethnic combatants or the moral cost of doing
    nothing.

    Contemporary social scientists who write about nationalism tend to
    stress the contingent elements of group identity -- the extent to
    which national consciousness is culturally and politically
    manufactured by ideologists and politicians. They regularly invoke
    Benedict Anderson's concept of "imagined communities," as if
    demonstrating that nationalism is constructed will rob the concept of
    its power. It is true, of course, that ethnonational identity is never
    as natural or ineluctable as nationalists claim. Yet it would be a
    mistake to think that because nationalism is partly constructed it is
    therefore fragile or infinitely malleable. Ethnonationalism was not a
    chance detour in European history: it corresponds to some enduring
    propensities of the human spirit that are heightened by the process of
    modern state creation, it is a crucial source of both solidarity and
    enmity, and in one form or another, it will remain for many
    generations to come. One can only profit from facing it directly


    Copyright 2002--2008 by the Council on Foreign Relations. All rights reserved.


    Americans generally belittle the role of ethnic nationalism in politics. But in fact, it corresponds to some enduring propensities of the human spirit, it is galvanized by modernization, and in one form or another, it will drive global politics for generations to come. Once ethnic nationalism has captured the imagination of groups in a multiethnic society, ethnic disaggregation or partition is often the least bad answer.
    What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

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