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Introduction FEDERALISM, RECONCILIATION, AND POWER-SHARING IN POST-CONFLICT SOCIETIES
Author(s) -
Neophytos Loizides,
Iosif Kovras,
Kathleen Ireton
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
federal governance
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1923-6158
DOI - 10.24908/fg.v8i2.4373
Subject(s) - power sharing , federalism , amnesty , transitional justice , politics , grassroots , power (physics) , political science , economic justice , accommodation , sociology , political economy , law and economics , public administration , law , psychology , physics , quantum mechanics , neuroscience
This special issue examines the interplay between reconciliation in postconflict societies and alternative mechanisms of political accommodation. In our introductory article, we define and explore the central concepts used in post-conflict studies while investigating the potential linkages between reconciliation and federal or power-sharing arrangements. We argue that addressing issues of justice, reconciliation and amnesty in the aftermath of conflict frequently facilitates cooperation in establishing successful institutional mechanisms at the political level. We also examine the degree to which reconciliation at the grassroots level should be seen as a prerequisite of consolidating power-sharing arrangements among elites particularly in the form of federal agreements. Finally, we discuss the individual contributions to the special issue and highlight the importance of incorporating insights from the literature of transitional justice and post-conflict reconciliation to the study and practice of federalism.

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