Kumar, R. (1997) “The Troubled History of Partition’
13 October 2020
Kumar, R. (1997) “The Troubled History of Partition’, Foreign Affairs 76 (1) (Jan./Feb. 1997), 22-34.
- 1995 Dayton Peace Accord: a partition agreement with an exit clause for outside powers.
- Claim that partitions as solutions to ethnic conflicts save lives, safeguard rights of contending ethnic groups through intervention of impartial outside power, and create homogenous territories through population transfers.
- Instead of doing so, partitions “fomented further violence and forced mass migration” (24).
- Partition assumes irreconcilable ethnic identities and capacity to separate ethnic groups.
- Usually, partitions are “driven by considerations extraneous to the needs and desires of the people displaced” and “end up stimulating further and even new conflict” (26).
- Case studies of Cyprus, Palestine, Northern Ireland, India, Bosnia show that partitions are seen as temporary solutions to crises; however, once implemented “ethnic partitions have never been reversed; their implementation has inexorably driven communities further apart”. (33).
- Ethnic partition can hamper development of postwar economies.
- “Divide and Quit” approach rarely works: it turns into “Divide and Be forced to stay” (34).
- “Investment in reintegration may be discovered as the easier route to withdrawal.” (34)