Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2014
In The Early 1970S, Dankwart Rustow Stressed The Centrality of national identity as a background condition for democratization. A recently emerging body of literature has raised this important issue again, opening it up for further discussion. Mark Thompson, Juan Linz and Alfred Stepan, for example, have highlighted the centrality of the national identity question (they use the term ‘stateness’) in their recent work. Henry Bienen and Jeffrey Herbst see the emergence of a sense of national identity as a prerequisite for democratization in Africa, thus confirming Rustow's idea of sequence. Ilter Turan supports Rustow's view on the role of national identity in his analysis of the cases of Iraq and the Central Asian republics, while James Putzel uses the macro variable of the national identity question to explain why democratic politics is more difficult in Indonesia, which faces the risk of disintegration, and in the ethnically-divided Malaysia, with its weak national identity, than in the Philippines where disintegration is not an issue.
I feel indebted to Stephen Bell, Jan Pakulski, David Martin Jones, Christine Standish, Jackie Hogan, Yingjie Guo and Eric Zhang for their comments and help. Especially I would like to express my sincere thanks to the anonymous referees of the journal for their valuable comments and suggestions.
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8 I acknowledge that Rustow’s theory of sequence is only one among a broad study of political issues such as security, leadership and development, and his research covers a wide area including Sweden, the Middle East, Japan and Turkey. I also acknowledge other theories of sequence. For example, Robert Dahl argues that the pattern of sequence where political competition precedes political participation is favourable to the development of polyarchy. See Dahl, Robert A., Polyarchy , New Haven, Yale University, 1971 Google Scholar. For a testing of Dahl’s sequence, see Dix, Robert H., ‘History and Democracy Revisited’, Comparative Politics , 27:1 (October, 1994), pp. 91–104 Google Scholar. Stephan Haggard and Robert R. Kaufman analyse the predictable consequences of three sequences: economic reform first; simultaneous economic and political liberalization; and democracy first. See The Politics of Economic Adjustment: International Constraints, Distributive Conflicts, and the State, Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press, 1992, pp. 332–41. Nance Bermeo contends that the consolidation of democracy preceded structural adjustment and economic reforms in Spain, Portugal and Argentina. See Bermeo, N., ‘Sacrifice, Sequence, and Strength in Successful Dual Transitions: Lessons from Spain’, The Journal of Politics , 56:3 (08 1994), pp. 601–27.Google Scholar
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13 Ibid., p. 360.
14 Ibid., p. 354.
15 Ibid., p. 351.
16 Ibid., pp. 350–1.
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19 However, the identity issue re-emerged at the end of the twentieth century; for example, the recent moves to devolve assemblies to Scotland and Wales.
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23 Ibid., pp. 131–2, esp. footnote no. 21.
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33 One may point out an exceptional case of Indonesia where Habibie offered autonomy to resolve the East Timor problem, but failed to maintain the unity of Indonesia in 1999. Nevertheless, others may argue that the autonomy proposal did not go far enough. For when Habibie offered autonomy, dialogue and negotiation, the East Timorese felt that it was too little, too late. If the autonomy proposal had been offered by Suharto, they would probably have been happy to accept it, but their sights were set higher — on full independence.
34 This is foreseen by Rustow in his equation of Authority-Equality-Identity (a hyphen denotes simultaneity).
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37 Offe, ‘Capitalism by Democratic Design’, p. 673. Also see Elliott Armijo, Leslie, Biersteker, Thomas J. and Lowenthal, Abraham F., ‘The Problems of Simultaneous Transitions’, Journal of Democracy , 5:4 (10 1994), pp. 161–73.Google Scholar
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40 Rustow put it as ‘Authority-Equality: Identity’ (a hyphen denotes simultaneity, and a colon sequence).
41 See Rustow, A World of Nations, p. 132.
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44 There has even emerged the view that unification is no longer an urgent issue. This is illustrated by the names of the political parties. In the past, there was a Democratic Unification Party (1973 and 1978), a Reunification Democratic Party in 1988 and a Unification National Party in 1992. However, none of the names of the current three major parties — the Democratic Liberal Party, the Democratic Party, and United Liberal Democrats — contain the words ‘unification’ or ‘reunification’. When Kim Young-sam’s Reunification Democratic Party merged with the ruling party in 1990, it dropped the word ‘reunification’ from its new name. This may have been necessitated by the merger, but it may also ref lect the view that unification is a less urgent issue in Korean politics today.
45 Wachman, Taiwan, pp. 261–2.
46 In Irian Jaya, Mochtar Pakpahan’s Partai Buruh Nasional (PBN) endeavoured to win votes by promising to campaign for Irianese independence in the national parliament if it had representatives elected. The PBN, however, gained only two seats. By contrast, Golkar had a comfortable lead over other political parties, and won 36 per cent of the vote and 70 seats. Simon Philpott, ‘ “We are Rich but We are Dead”: Irian Jaya and the 1999 Indonesian General Election’, paper presented at the Indonesian Elections Workshop, Monash University, Australia, 25 June 1999.
47 Aspinall, Edward, ‘The 1999 General Elections in Aceh’, the paper presented at the Indonesian Elections workshop, Monash University, Australia, 25 06 1999.Google Scholar
48 In his presidential inaugural address in May 2000, the new President, Chen Shuibian, promised that he would not call for a referendum on independence unless China launched a war against Taiwan.
49 For detailed discussion on this matter, see Baogang He and Yingiie Goo, Nationalism, National Identity and Democratization in China, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2000, ch. 7.