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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter February 8, 2017

Ending Consociational Power-Sharing. The Sejdić and Finci Case and the Prospects for Constitutional Reform in Bosnia and Herzegovina

  • Hildur Boldt

    Works at the Kalevi Sorsa Foundation in Finland

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From the journal ICL Journal

Abstract

Consociationalism is frequently adopted as a tool to resolve conflicts in deeply divided societies. It is increasingly considered only a transitional arrangement, because it is an impediment to democracy and social peace in the long-term. It is therefore relevant to explore the possibilities to end consociational arrangements.

Bosnia and Herzegovina has by all accounts a dysfunctional and discriminatory political system based on ethnic representation. Corporate consociational provisions of the constitution were found to be in violation of the European Convention of Human Rights in the Sejdić and Finci case. This thesis seeks to understand the legal and political effects of that judgment and the prospects of ending the corporate consociational arrangements in Bosnia and Herzegovina, in order to allow for politics that are not solely based on ethnicity.

The prospect for constitutional reform are discussed based on previous attempts at constitutional reform in Bosnia and Herzegovina; the Dutch, Austrian and South African experiences; and insights from theory of democratic transitions.

About the author

Hildur Boldt

Works at the Kalevi Sorsa Foundation in Finland

Published Online: 2017-2-8
Published in Print: 2012-9-1

© 2017 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

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