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Strategies for International Legitimacy. A Comparative Study of Elite Behavior in Ethnic Conflicts

Steiner, Kristian (1996)
Abstract
Although ethnic conflicts are an acute international problem, researchers in international relations have conducted surprisingly little research in this area. The aim with this study is to analyze one aspect of ethnic conflicts, how the elites representing ethnic groups act to make the great powers legitimize their own demands, and delegitimize the demands of the enemy by adducing to norms. In the study, it is assumed that international legitimacy is an immaterial resource, which could be a valuable substitute in ethnic conflicts for material resources such as weapons and financial assets. Accordingly it is interesting to investigate whether elites with a reduced access to material resources, other things being equal, act more intensely to... (More)
Although ethnic conflicts are an acute international problem, researchers in international relations have conducted surprisingly little research in this area. The aim with this study is to analyze one aspect of ethnic conflicts, how the elites representing ethnic groups act to make the great powers legitimize their own demands, and delegitimize the demands of the enemy by adducing to norms. In the study, it is assumed that international legitimacy is an immaterial resource, which could be a valuable substitute in ethnic conflicts for material resources such as weapons and financial assets. Accordingly it is interesting to investigate whether elites with a reduced access to material resources, other things being equal, act more intensely to make the great powers legitimize and delegitimize claims, than elites with somewhat better access to material resources. Usually elites representing ethnic minorities have a reduced access to material resources, and a minority-majority comparison is conducted using a logic of most similar systems design; the behavior of Czechoslovak elite, the majority, is compared with the behavior of German Bohemia in the conflict from 1918-1919. In the study, it is found that the minority elite defined its demands in confromity to norms than the majority. It is also reasonable to believe that elites in ethnic conflicts, acting under a unipolar great power situation have a reduced access to material resources relative to that in a bipolar era. The incitement to be generous with regards to the minority elite with material resources are absent for the only remaining great power; as no additional great power is competing for influence. Therefore, elites acting under bi- and unipolar great power structures are compared; Israeli and PLO elite behavior from 1970-85 is compared with their behavior from 1988-93, where the former period is defined as bipolar and the latter as unipolar. In the research it is evident that the PLO, and later also Israel, redefined their demands in a more norm conforming direction. In the study is also a comparison conducted of most different elites; the German Bohemian elite is compared with the Israeli, and the PLO with the Czechoslovak, in order to see similarities in spite of major systemic differences. A common behavior for all the four elites is the emphasis on the importance of credibility. All elites act in order to increase the credibility of their own demands and decrease the credibility of their enemy1s demands. (Less)
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author
supervisor
opponent
  • Lidén, Anders
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
norms, elite behavior, strategy, Czechoslovakia, German Bohemia, Israel, Freds- och konfliktforskning, Polemology, PLO, International legitimacy, ethnic conflict
pages
225 pages
publisher
Lund University Press
defense location
Eden, room 233
defense date
1996-11-28 10:15:00
ISBN
0-86238-456-7
91-7966-390-7
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
76a694b8-4327-4cbb-b51c-68ce6ca9498d (old id 17767)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 10:30:05
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:59:08
@phdthesis{76a694b8-4327-4cbb-b51c-68ce6ca9498d,
  abstract     = {{Although ethnic conflicts are an acute international problem, researchers in international relations have conducted surprisingly little research in this area. The aim with this study is to analyze one aspect of ethnic conflicts, how the elites representing ethnic groups act to make the great powers legitimize their own demands, and delegitimize the demands of the enemy by adducing to norms. In the study, it is assumed that international legitimacy is an immaterial resource, which could be a valuable substitute in ethnic conflicts for material resources such as weapons and financial assets. Accordingly it is interesting to investigate whether elites with a reduced access to material resources, other things being equal, act more intensely to make the great powers legitimize and delegitimize claims, than elites with somewhat better access to material resources. Usually elites representing ethnic minorities have a reduced access to material resources, and a minority-majority comparison is conducted using a logic of most similar systems design; the behavior of Czechoslovak elite, the majority, is compared with the behavior of German Bohemia in the conflict from 1918-1919. In the study, it is found that the minority elite defined its demands in confromity to norms than the majority. It is also reasonable to believe that elites in ethnic conflicts, acting under a unipolar great power situation have a reduced access to material resources relative to that in a bipolar era. The incitement to be generous with regards to the minority elite with material resources are absent for the only remaining great power; as no additional great power is competing for influence. Therefore, elites acting under bi- and unipolar great power structures are compared; Israeli and PLO elite behavior from 1970-85 is compared with their behavior from 1988-93, where the former period is defined as bipolar and the latter as unipolar. In the research it is evident that the PLO, and later also Israel, redefined their demands in a more norm conforming direction. In the study is also a comparison conducted of most different elites; the German Bohemian elite is compared with the Israeli, and the PLO with the Czechoslovak, in order to see similarities in spite of major systemic differences. A common behavior for all the four elites is the emphasis on the importance of credibility. All elites act in order to increase the credibility of their own demands and decrease the credibility of their enemy1s demands.}},
  author       = {{Steiner, Kristian}},
  isbn         = {{0-86238-456-7}},
  keywords     = {{norms; elite behavior; strategy; Czechoslovakia; German Bohemia; Israel; Freds- och konfliktforskning; Polemology; PLO; International legitimacy; ethnic conflict}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Lund University Press}},
  title        = {{Strategies for International Legitimacy. A Comparative Study of Elite Behavior in Ethnic Conflicts}},
  year         = {{1996}},
}