Lustick, I. (1979) ‘Stability in Divided Societies: Consociationalism versus Control’
22 October 2020
Lustick, I. (1979) ‘Stability in Divided Societies: Consociationalism versus Control’, World Politics 31 (3), 325-44.
- Focus on compromise, bargaining and accommodation as methods for achieving stability in deeply divided societies.
- Deeply divided: a situation where “ascriptive ties generate an antagonistic segmentation of society, based on terminal identities with high political salience, sustained over a substantial period of time and a wide variety of issues. As a minimum condition, boundaries between rival groups must be sharp enough so that membership is clear and, with few exceptions, unchangeable” (325).
- Aim: to distinguish between ‘consociational’ approach and ‘control’: consociational models can be deployed effectively only if an alternative typological category of ‘control’ is available.
- Puzzle: “how to explain the political stability over time in societies that continue to be characterized by deep vertical cleavages”.
- Consociation and control both assume continuation of deep divisions or vertical segmentation in societies, as well as intense rivalries between segments for key resources: they are alternative explanations for stability.
- Consociationalism: mutual cooperation of subnational elites: Stability is the result of the cooperative efforts of subculture elites “to counteract the centrifugal tendencies of cultural fragmentation” (Lijphart): elite cartel whose members have a shared interest in survival of the arena where their groups compete, and negotiate and enforce, within their groups, terms of mutually acceptable compromises: interethnic bargaining (Rothchild).
- Control: “superior power of one segment is mobilized to enforce stability by constraining the political actions and opportunities of another segment or segments” (328).
- Barry: critique of consociationalism: remedies may aggravate rather than rehabilitate; antidemocratic, manipulative nature of consociational ‘techniques’ often ignored.
- Control model: stability in a vertically segmented society is the result of sustained manipulation of subordinate segments by a superordinate segment.
- Contrasting consociation and control along seven dimensions:
Issue | Consociation | Control |
Criterion that effectively governs the authoritative allocation of resources | Common denominator of groups’ interests as defined by elites | Interest of superordinate segment as defined by its elite. |
Linkages between the two subunits | Political or material exchanges: negotiations, bargains, compromises. | Penetrative linkages: extracts what it needs and delivers what it thinks fit. |
The significance of bargaining | Hard bargaining between units is a necessary fact of life | Hard bargaining signifies breakdown of control & stability |
The role of the official regime | Umpires: focus is preservation of the arena (Bailey): translate compromises into legislation & administrative procedures and enforce rules without discrimination. | Legal & administrative instrument of the superordinate group; staffed by dominant group; uses discretion to benefit sub-unit it represents at expense of other unit. |
Normative justification for continuation espoused publicly & privately by regime’s officials | General references to welfare of both subunits. | Elaborate group-specific ideology – derived from history and perceived interests of dominant group. |
Character of central strategic problem facing subunit elites | Symmetrical for each sub-unit: elites must strike bargains that do not jeopardise the integrity of the system as a whole: internal group discipline is key | Asymmetric with regard to both subunits: superordinate elites devise cost-effective techniques for manipulating subordinate group; subordinate elites exploit bargaining & resistance opportunities. External focus is key. |
Appropriate visual metaphor: separateness, specificity, stability | Delicately but securely balanced scale | Puppeteer manipulating his stringed puppet. |
- Reasons for developing ‘control’ as analytic approach:
- Explain absence of effective politicization of subnational groups other than by questioning genuineness of groups’ cultural differentiation; superordinate group directly responsible for failure of subordinate units to produce effective political organization.
- Different kinds of coercion involving mix of coercive and non-coercive techniques that emerge in particular conditions, have different implications, are more or less attractive as prescriptive models.
- “In light of the unavoidably elitist character of consociational regimes, certain consociational societies may in fact be more closed for more citizens than societies in which a certain measure of control is exercised by, for example, a dominant majority overt the free political behavior of a subordinate minority” (334).
- Category of ‘control’ helps establish conceptual boundaries of the ‘consociational’ approach; study of mechanisms of control assists in elaboration of consociational models.
- One society can contain both kinds of relationships between its different groups.
- “In deeply divided societies where consociational techniques have not been, or cannot be, successfully employed, control may represent a model for the organisation of intergroup relations that is substantially preferable to other conceivable solutions: civil war, extermination, or deportation” (336).
- Four paths for management of communal conflict:
- Institutionalised dominance: three methods of conflict management
- Proscribe/control political expression of dominated groups’ interests;
- Prohibit entry/access of dominated group members into dominant group;
- Provide monopoly/preferential access to dominant group members to political participation, advanced education, economic opportunities etc.
- Induced assimilation;
- Syncretic integration;
- Balanced pluralism.
- Institutionalised dominance: three methods of conflict management
- Overt coercion is often evidence of breakdown of control system, not just proof of its existence (Kuper).
- Parallels with theory of ‘internal colonialism’.
- “In particular situations and for limited periods of time, certain forms of control may be preferable to the chaos and bloodshed that might be the only alternatives” (344).
- Study of ‘control’ systems helps identify strategies for resistance and is part of struggle to dismantle such systems.