Tully's Strange Multiplicity PDF
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Summary
This document explores various claims for cultural recognition, including nationalist movements and ethnic minorities. It examines the relationship between culture and politics, arguing that cultural identity is not static and that interactions continually shape it. The text also questions the concept of a uniform nation-state and the ways in which political dialogue can lead to mutual recognition.
Full Transcript
I. Tully’s strange multiplicity 6 types of claim for cultural recognition: 1. Nationalist movements 2. Regional associations 3. Ethnic minorities 4. Immigration and displaced people 5. Feminist movements 6. Indigenous people A struggle for greater liberty and freedom...
I. Tully’s strange multiplicity 6 types of claim for cultural recognition: 1. Nationalist movements 2. Regional associations 3. Ethnic minorities 4. Immigration and displaced people 5. Feminist movements 6. Indigenous people A struggle for greater liberty and freedom ⇒ a demand for power, not for resources Demanding special rights, accommodations Turn policies in a way that align with their culture and ways ⇒ forms of self-government aspirations Current constitutional features are unjust ○ Culture cannot be separated from politics (constitutive aspect, although conventional Western theory used to portray them as separated) Mutual recognition No recognition of one national culture ○ The liberal perspective (European) is embedded in culture however, so the state ends up not being neutral ⇒ this is often difficult to accept Not all cultures can be recognised as independent nation states 2 views of cultures: Dominant historical view ○ Bounded and internally uniform, separate from others ⇒ you can share things within a group of people ○ Using force to ensure separation and achieve self-determination ⇒ taking control over the state and becoming the majority Culture as overlapping, interactive and internally negotiated ○ Cultures cannot be separated from each others ⇒ they mix, change, interact continuously with contact to others ○ You cannot achieve such “self”-determination ○ There hasn’t been a certain number of separated cultures historically ⇒ what we have now is a result of encounters and joint influences ○ People within cultures are not the same: they have different views, challengers The nation-state is not a uniform society Politics take place on a changing terrain ○ We are always members of culture, we are always already engaging negotiations When the state takes decisions, it tends to separate cultures and give different rights accordingly ○ What about people at the borders? Do not belong to one nation-state in particular ⇒ we should not try to enforce uniformity within fixed boundaries The spirit of Haida Gwaii Diverse federalism ○ Our state and relationships with others can be irregular (challenging the idea that group should be uniform, otherwise we call policies “accommodations”) ○ Irregularity ⇒ a single law may not be encompassing all the demands, and may not need to be the same across polities ○ Equity, as opposed to equality What is uniting us is not a constitutional document ⇒ it is our pursuit for multiculturalism, contract and agreements, reached by multicultural and political dialogue ⇒ Constitutionalism as an ethos of dialogue in mutual recognition Normative theory is always asking about: how can we implement this? Illustration ⇒ the ship of state: always a ruler governing others