McGarry, J. (1998) ‘‘Demographic engineering’: the state-directed movement of ethnic groups as a technique of conflict regulation’
10 October 2020
McGarry, J. (1998) ‘‘Demographic engineering’: the state-directed movement of ethnic groups as a technique of conflict regulation’, Ethnic and Racial Studies 21 (4), 613-38.
Introduction
- Focus: state-directed movement of Ethnic groups as a technique to manage ethnic diversity: states move agents on behalf of the state and enemies perceived as threats to that state.
- Shaped by nationalism – ‘ethnicized’ states and minority-based nationalist movements.
- Securitization of minorities.
Why does the state move ethnic groups?
- State agents moved in:
- To promote security.
- Consolidate state control over a territory
- Strategies:
- Garrison-peoples;
- Assimilationist strategies (ethnic intermixing);
- States ‘enemies’ moved out:
- To consolidate control (reducing risk);
- To deter others from challenging the state;
- To assist in their assimilation;
- To break link between ‘enemy group’ and its ‘homeland’.
How are ethnic groups moved?
- States ‘pull’ agents to desired locations
- Free or subsidized land, jobs, salaries
- New communications infrastructures;
- Favorable linguistic environment
- Military installations
- States ‘push’ agents to move
- Soldiers who garrison outposts
- Compulsory jobs for graduating students
- States often actively move enemy groups
- Exchange of minority populations;
- Initiating refugee flows;
- Direct force;
- Indirect coercion;
- Use of surrogates to inflict violence on minorities;
- Discriminatory measures;
- Stripping citizenship.
When do states move ethnic groups?
- Imperial control strategies gave way to ethnically-based nationalisms: key role of nationalist ideologies in determining state agents and state ‘enemy’ groups.
- Temporal factors:
- State captured by radical elites: importance of political leadership;
- State security perceived as threatened by minority groups:
- Minority leaders reject state authority: The Rebel Threat;
- Inter-state conflict when minority group is perceived as security risk: The Fifth Column. – movements are both punitive and preventive, based on revenge, radicalization, and instrumental reasons; facilitated and covered up by wars.
- Neighbouring states dispute a region inhabited by minority group: The Irredentist Threat.
- State acquires new territory inhabited by minority groups or Ethnonational group acquires statehood (with outside help) in a heterogenous territory: ‘Nationalizing state’: particularly when state is captured by radical nationalist elites who use conflict as opportunity to forcibly expel a minority and replace it with members of dominant group.
Conclusion
- State-directed movement of ethnic groups is a technique of ethnic conflict management.
- Main goal: consolidation of control over territory by facilitating control / assimilation of a minority group, or by its removal from a specific territory.
- Continuum of tools deployed in particular when state captured by radical nationalist elites.