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Constitutional Design for Divided Societies

Arend Lijphart
- Vol. 1, Iss: 4, pp 33-44
TLDR
Lijphart as mentioned in this paper presents a set of such recommendations, focusing in particular on the constitutional needs of countries with deep ethnic and other cleavages, and his recommendations will indicate as precisely as possible which particular power-sharing rules and institutions are optimal and why.
Abstract
Over the past half-century, democratic constitutional design has undergone a sea change. After the Second World War, newly independent countries tended simply to copy the basic constitutional rules of their former colonial masters, without seriously considering alternatives. Today, constitution writers choose more deliberately among a wide array of constitutional models, with various advantages and disadvantages. While at first glance this appears to be a beneficial development, it has actually been a mixed blessing: Since they now have to deal with more alternatives than they can readily handle, constitution writers risk making ill-advised decisions. In my opinion, scholarly experts can be more helpful to constitution writers by formulating specific recommendations and guidelines than by overwhelming those who must make the decision with a barrage of possibilities and options. This essay presents a set of such recommendations, focusing in particular on the constitutional needs of countries with deep ethnic and other cleavages. In such deeply divided societies the interests and demands of communal groups can be accommodated only by the establishment of power sharing, and my recommendations will indicate as precisely as possible which particular power-sharing rules and institutions are optimal and why. (Such rules and institutions may be useful in less intense forms in many other societies as well.) Most experts on divided societies and constitutional engineering broadly agree that deep societal divisions pose a grave problem for democracy, and that it is therefore generally more difficult to establish and maintain democratic government in divided than in homogeneous Arend Lijphart is Research Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the University of California, San Diego. He is the author of Patterns of Democracy: Government Forms and Performance in Thirty-Six Countries (1999) and many other studies of democratic institutions, the governance of deeply divided societies, and electoral systems.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Latin American Presidencies Interrupted

TL;DR: Valenzuela et al. as mentioned in this paper pointed out that only 7 of the 37 changes of government in the region took place through military interventions, just two of which can be fairly described as clearly antidemocratic in intent.
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Electoral Institutions and Electoral Violence in Sub-Saharan Africa

TL;DR: This paper found that electoral violence is more likely in countries that employ majoritarian voting rules and elect fewer legislators from each district in Sub-Saharan Africa. But they did not find that the use of violent electoral tactics was correlated with the high stakes put in place by majoritarian electoral institutions.
MonographDOI

Islam and Democracy in Indonesia: Tolerance without Liberalism

TL;DR: Menchik et al. as discussed by the authors argue that Indonesia's Islamic organizations sustain the country's thriving civil society, democracy, and reputation for tolerance amid diversity, yet scholars poorly understand how these organizations envision the accommodation of religious difference.
Book

Electoral Systems and Political Context: How the Effects of Rules Vary Across New and Established Democracies

TL;DR: In this paper, political context, electoral rules, and their effects on strategic and personal voting have been investigated in a mixed-member electoral system, and the effect of electoral rules on strategic defection has been discussed.
Book

Making Constitutions in Deeply Divided Societies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that an incrementalist approach to constitution-making can enable societies riven by deep internal disagreements to either enact a written constitution or function with an unwritten one, and illustrate the process of constitution-writing in three deeply divided societies - Israel, India and Ireland - and explore the various incrementalist strategies deployed by their drafters.
References
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Book

Developing Democracy: Toward Consolidation

Larry Diamond
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the third wave of global democratization has come to an end, leaving a growing gap between the electoral form and the liberal substance of democracy.
Book

Presidents and Assemblies: Constitutional Design and Electoral Dynamics

TL;DR: In this article, the constitutional origin and survival of assembly and executive, and the legislative powers of presidents: veto and decree, are discussed, as well as electoral dynamics: efficiency and inefficiency.
Book

Minorities at risk: A global view of ethnopolitical conflicts

TL;DR: A comprehensive survey of 233 politically active communal groups, plus in-depth assessments of ethnic tensions in the western democracies, the former Soviet bloc, the Middle East, and Africa is presented in this article.
Book

Mixed-member electoral systems : the best of both worlds?

TL;DR: Shugart and Wattenberg as discussed by the authors place mixed-member systems in the world of electoral systems and place them as the best of both worlds in a typology of mixed-members.
Journal ArticleDOI

The failure of presidential democracy

TL;DR: The case of Latin America: party politics and the crisis of presidentialism in Chile -a proposal for a parliamentary form of government, Arturo Valenzuela presidentialism and democratic stability in Uruguay, Luis Eduardo Gonzalez and Charles Guy Gillespie Brazil - toward parliamentarism?, Bolivar Lamounier presidentialism, and Colombian politics, Jonathon Hartlyn loose parties, "floating" politicans, and institutional stress -presidentism in Ecuador, 1979-1988, Catherine M. Conaghan presidents, messiahs, and constitutional breakdowns in Peru, Cynthia McCl