Horowitz, D.L. (2003) ‘The Cracked Foundations of the Right to Secede’
13 October 2020
Horowitz, D.L. (2003) ‘The Cracked Foundations of the Right to Secede’, Journal of Democracy 14 (2), 5-17.
- Two international legal developments in regulation of conflict and warfare between ethnic groups:
- Tribunals to punish genocide and crimes against humanity;
- Elaboration of various doctrines of human rights, including a possible right of ethnic groups to secede.
- Such a right is ill-considered and dangerous.
- Certain theorists see secession as answer to problems of ethnic conflict and violence; that is wrong: it is likely to make such problems worse.
- Secession does not create homogenous successor states or reduce conflict, violence, or minority oppression in successor states (5-6).
- Minorities’ condition can best be improved by devising institutions to increase their satisfaction within existing states.
- “Partition can be accomplished reluctantly, as a matter of prudence, without recognizing a right to secede” 96).
- Atlantic Charter, 1941: self-determination limited to peoples living under foreign domination, resulting in decolonization.
- From the end of WWII to end of Cold War territorial boundaries were remarkably stable.
- After the end of the Cold War boundaries became less stable. Badinter Commission on Yugoslavia legitimised breakup of this federation.
- Various theories of self-determination leading to secession:
- An integral right of peoples to be free of authoritarian oppression: right to live under a democratic regime;
- Right of people in general of with common group characteristics to choose with whom they wish to associate politically – although collective identity fluctuates;
- Remedial right: last-ditch response to discrimination or oppression by central government;
- All assume secession can result in homogenous successor states or at least ones that will guarantee minority rights.
- Treatment of minorities in new states will not improve if minorities were not respected in undivided state.
- “Secession merely proliferates the arenas in which the problem of intergroup political accommodation must be faced” (9).
- Secession encourages the former minority, now a majority, to cleanse the secessionist state of its own minorities and induces the rump state to do the same.
- There are no truly natural boundaries that secession can institutionalise.
- Secessions and partitions convert domestic ethnic disputes into more dangerous international ones and trigger irredentist claims that often are followed by ethnic cleansing.
- A right to secede will undermine efforts to achieve interethnic accommodation within states (10).
- Devolution efforts are most effectively undermined by a right, recognised under international law, to secession.
- “A right to secession effectively advantages militant members of ethnic groups at the expense of conciliators.” (11)
- A right to secession grounded in extreme oppression of minorities derives from an alleged commitment of international law to democracy. Such a commitment is tenuous at best.
- Self-determination for peoples or groups within a state is to be achieved by participation in its constitutional system, on the basis of respect for its territorial integrity.
- Secession is an anti-state movement and undermines the very foundation of current international legal order – state sovereignty.
- Solution is to foster interethnic accommodation within states, through institutions that can mitigate conflict:
- Consociational democracy: neglect of democratic opposition and propensity for excessively limited government and immobilism; it is attractive to minorities, not majorities.
- Use of political incentives to encourage ethnic moderation: electoral systems capable of inducing moderate behaviour by politicians.
- Political engineering can work in specific circumstances, but is no panacea.
- “Efforts at conciliation will not be helped by providing either a liberal or constrained right to secede” (15).