European University Institute Library

The political sources of solidarity in diverse societies, Keith Banting and Will Kymlicka

Label
The political sources of solidarity in diverse societies, Keith Banting and Will Kymlicka
Language
eng
Abstract
Building and sustaining solidarity is an enduring challenge in all liberal-democratic societies. Ensuring that individuals are willing to accept these "strains of commitment, " to borrow John Rawls' apt phrase, has been a worry even in relatively homogeneous societies, and the challenge seems even greater in ethnically and religiously diverse societies. This paper focuses is on the political sources of solidarity. Much has been written about the economic and social factors that influence the willingness of the public to accept and support immigrants and minorities. But solidarity is also a political phenomenon, which can be built or eroded through politics. In addition, our focus on the political sources of solidarity. Understandably, the existing literature concentrates on the politics of backlash and exclusion. This paper looks at the politics of diversity from the opposite direction, asking what are the potential sources of political support for inclusion, and the conditions under which they are effective. How is solidarity built? How is it sustained? Reframing the analysis in this way does not necessarily produce optimism about the future prospects. But exploring the potential political sources of support leads to broader, multilayered perspective with long time horizons. The paper advances a framework for analysis which incorporates three levels: the sense of political community, the role of political agents, and impact of political institutions and policy regimes. Each of these levels, and the interactions among them, matter
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The political sources of solidarity in diverse societies
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
937549647
Responsibility statement
Keith Banting and Will Kymlicka
Series statement
EUI working papers. RSC, 2015/73EUI papersGlobal Governance Programme, 195
Content
Mapped to

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