Confessionalism (politics)

Confessionalism (politics)

Confessionalism (Arabic: taifiyya‎) is a system of government that refers to de jure mix of religion and politics. It can mean distributing political and institutional power proportionally among religious communities.

Contents

Debate

Proponents of confessionalism[who?] cite it as an effective way to secure the peaceful co-existence of diverse religious and ethnic communities by empowering each according to its "weight" in the region. However, critics point out that such a system may actually deepen conflict between ethnic groups. They argue that whichever group holds the most political power may use government to favour itself at the expense of other groups, or even to oppress rival groups. Also, as demographics change, the positions and power held by a particular group may no longer appropriately reflect the size of that group.

Debate over confessionalism raises similar issues to those facing consociationalism, of which confessionalism is one kind.[original research?]

The Levant

The repartition of assembly seats on a confessional base in the Middle East was inaugurated by the Ottoman Empire (e.g. in the Ottoman Parliament) and went on in several post-Ottoman countries with reserved seats for non-Muslim (Christian) minorities (Syria, Jordan), or for all religious communities including Muslim subgroups and Christian churches (Lebanon). A similar system prevails in Iran for the Armenian, Assyrian, Jewish and Zoroastrian minorities.

Lebanon

In Lebanon, all posts in government and seats in the legislature are apportioned amongst different religious groups according to a political agreement, as the relative demographic weight of those groups is unknown.[1]

Netherlands

In the politics of the Netherlands the term "confessionalism" refers to any political ideology based on religion.

Dutch parties usually labelled as confessionalist are the ChristianUnion and the Reformed Political Party, both exclusively Protestant, less often the Christian Democratic Appeal which has also several Muslims among its elected officials.

There are also minor Dutch Muslim parties, e.g. the Dutch Muslim Party (Dutch: Nederlandse Moslim Partij[2]) that has many common programmatical aims with the ChristianUnion[3] and the local (The Hague) party Islam Democrats (Dutch: Islam Democraten).[4] In January 2008, the creation of an Islamic Democratic Party (Dutch: Islamitische Democratische Partij) was announced, but it appeared after a few days it was a hoax, its programme was actually an adaptated copy of the programme of the Protestant fundamentalist Reformed Political Party.[5] [6] [7] [8] The only Muslim parties with political representation in the Netherlands are Islam Democrats and its splinter group Party of Unity, each with one councillor in the The Hague municipal council.

See also

References

  1. ^ Harb, Imad (March 2006). "Lebanon's Confessionalism: Problems and Prospects". United States Institute of Peace. http://www.usip.org/resources/lebanons-confessionalism-problems-and-prospects. Retrieved 2006-07-30. 
  2. ^ French: Pierre-Yves Lambert, Nederlandse Moslim Partij, Suffrage Universel
  3. ^ Dutch: NMP en CU eensgezind, De Pers, 15 February 2010
  4. ^ French: Pierre-Yves Lambert, Islam Democraten, Suffrage Universel
  5. ^ Dutch: Islamitische politieke partij wil hoofddoek in openbare gebouwen verplichten, Nieuw Religieus Peil (blog), 4 January 2008
  6. ^ Dutch: Robert Engel, Islamitisch Democratische Partij is hoax, Lucaswashier (blog), 5 January 2008
  7. ^ Dutch: Oprichting IDP is een hoax met een boodschap, 6 January 2008
  8. ^ French: Pierre-Yves Lambert, Islamitische Democratische Partij, Suffrage Universel



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