Ethnic federalism

Ethnic federalism, multi-ethnic or multi-national federalism,[1] is a form of federal system in which the federated regional or state units are defined by ethnicity. Ethnic federal systems have been created in attempts to accommodate demands for ethnic autonomy and manage inter-ethnic tensions within a state. They have not always succeeded in this: problems inherent in the construction and maintenance of an ethnic federation have led to some states or sub-divisions of a state into either breaking up, resorting to authoritarian repression, or resorting to ethnocracy, ethnic segregation, population transfer, internal displacement, ethnic cleansing, and/or even ethnicity-based attacks and pogroms.[2]

This type of federation was implemented from 1994 to 2018 by Meles Zenawi in Ethiopia. Meles Zenawi and his government adopted ethnic federalism with the aim of establishing the equality of all ethnic groups in Ethiopia.[3] Features of ethnic federalism have been displayed also in other countries, including Nepal, Pakistan, South Sudan, Yugoslavia, and Apartheid-era South Africa (see Bantustans).

  1. ^ Liam D. Anderson (2016), "Ethnofederalism: The Worst form of institutional arrangement...?", Academia
  2. ^ "Ethiopia: Understanding Oromia's mayhem after Hachalu's murder". The Africa Report.com. 2021-01-11. Retrieved 2021-10-27.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference ReferenceA was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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