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International Online Training Program On Intractable
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Conflict Research Consortium, University
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Denial of Identity
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Identity is one of several fundamental human needs that underlie
many intractable conflicts. Human needs theorists argue that conflicts over needs are
fundamentally different from conflicts over interests, because interests are negotiable,
whereas needs are not.
One of the most common types of needs conflicts are
conflicts over identity. These conflicts occur when a person or a group feels that his or
her sense of self--who one is--is threatened, or denied legitimacy or respect. One's sense
of self is so fundamental and so important, not only to one's self-esteem but also to how
one interprets the rest of the world, that any threat to identity is likely to produce a
strong response. Typically, this response is both aggressive and defensive, and can
escalate quickly into an intractable conflict.
Identity is the primary issue in most racial and ethnic
conflicts. It is also a key issue in many gender and family conflicts, when men and women
disagree on the proper role or "place" of the other, or children disagree with
their parents about who is in control of their lives and how they present themselves to
the outside world.
Identity conflicts can be especially difficult to resolve.
The opponent is often viewed as evil--even nonhuman--and their views and feelings not
worthy of attention. In addition, sitting down with the opponent can be seen as a threat
to one's own identity, so even beginning efforts at reconciliation can be extremely
difficult. Nevertheless, identity conflicts can be moderated, or even reconciled if the
parties want such an outcome and are willing to work for it over a long period of time.
Links to Examples of this Kind of Conflict:
- Jay Rothman--Resolving Identity-Based
Conflict: In Nations, Organizations, and Communities
- This is a summary of one of the leading recent books on identity conflicts.
- Saadia Touval -- Case Study: Lessons of
Preventative Diplomacy in Yugoslavia
- In this article, Touval examines the reasons why preventive
diplomacy failed in the case of the former Yugoslavia. One of the reasons
was that the need for identity of each of the cultural groups in the region was not
adequately addressed, leading each group to believe that violence was the only method
available to defend their own identity.
- Quebec nationalism: The Quest for Identity
- This article summarizes a discussion about identity and
nationalism in Quebec, Canada. Both the English-speaking and the French-speaking
populations feel threatened there, making the issue of nationalism in Quebec especially
difficult to grapple with.
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- David Brubaker -- Reconciliation in Rwanda:
The Art of the Possible
- This is an article about the ethnic conflict in Rwanda and
one effort that was made to start a reconciliation process there.
- Belief Ethnicity and
Nationalism - United States Institute of Peace
- This paper discusses the sources of intolerance.
Links to Outside Sources of Information on Identity Conflict
- Community Conflict
Policy and Possibilities by Donald Horowitz
- This paper discusses the nature and cause of "intractable conflicts" and
compares the characteristics and methods of management of a variety of ethnic conflicts
including Northern Ireland, Nigeria, and Sri Lanka. Note: full text is
here--scroll down below information on how to order.
Tarja Vayrynen
Securitised Ethnic Identities and Communal Conflicts
Bent Jorgenson Ethnic
Boundaries and the Margins of the Margin
- The 'Confusion' of
Civilizations -- David Little
- This article discusses the impact of culture and nationalism on ethnic and religious
intolerance.
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- Serbian Nationalism and the
Origins of the Yugoslav Crisis
United States Institute
of Peace--Sino-Tibetan co-Existence: Creating Space for Tibetan Self-Direction
U.S. Institute of
Peace--Religion, Nationalism, and Peace in Sudan
Copyright ©1998 Conflict Research Consortium -- Contact: crc@colorado.edu