Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-pftt2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-06T22:13:07.670Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Nonterritorial Autonomy and Minority (Dis)Empowerment: Past, Present, and Future

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 May 2020

Federica Prina*
Affiliation:
Central and East European Studies, School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK
*
*Corresponding author. Email: federica.prina@glasgow.ac.uk
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

This review article outlines the literature on nonterritorial autonomy (NTA) from the renewed interest in the concept in the mid-2000s until today. First, the article provides a brief overview of the meaning of NTA and the rationale behind it, highlighting how, in academic literature, NTA oscillates between positions that treat it as an attractive option and a highly impractical system (difficult to realize in practice or even pin down conceptually). Second, the article looks at trends in the existing literature, which has approached NTA with various emphases: the functions it fulfils (or has fulfilled); its (at times) supplementary role vis-à-vis territorial autonomy; and the dynamics that have led to its introduction in some countries, with attendant implications. Third, the article outlines some of NTA’s complexities, suggesting future areas of research, with reference to the interaction of territoriality and nonterritoriality, collective rights and participation, and potentially negative consequences of NTA regimes.

Type
State of the Field
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© Association for the Study of Nationalities 2020

Research on nonterritorial autonomy (NTA) has, until recently, been approached unsystematically. Thus, it differs from the much more extensive literature on territorial autonomy (TA). In fact, NTA has often been approached as a sub-field of autonomy studies rather than as a field in its own right (Malloy Reference Malloy, Malloy, Osipov and Vizi2015, 2). The lack of prominence in academic literature, the relative rarity of concrete cases of NTA, and the frequent vagueness of the rights flowing from it have long relegated the concept to a condition of obscurity. A rapidly growing literature has resulted in sustained efforts to fill existing gaps, with new studies entirely devoted to NTA’s theory and practice.

Despite its limited popularity, NTA theory represents a significant chapter in European history with reference to debates on diversity accommodation. NTA is linked to the idea that autonomy in the management of particular spheres of concern to minority communities (primarily language, culture and education) should be guaranteed regardless of their members’ physical location. Thus, it aims to provide nonterritorial solutions to the regulation of minority affairs, meaning that NTA regimes are ideally placed to meet the needs of territorially dispersed communities, while also circumventing potential threats to a state’s territorial integrity.

NTA Origins and Rationale

Austro-Marxists Karl Renner and Otto Bauer were the first scholars to clearly conceptualize, through a series of writings, what they referred to as “national cultural autonomy” (NCA). A seminal text is Renner’s “State and Nation” (2005), first published in 1899. In the context of a highly diverse Austro-Hungarian empire, NCA was put forward as a model that could prevent its dissolution through diversity accommodation decoupled from territoriality. The proposed NCA regime would create institutions recognized as corporations under public law, with the autonomy to self-manage in the domains of culture and language. Individuals would (voluntarily) affiliate to ethnic communities, entering their names into national registers. NCA was seen to obviate the traps of a “centralist-atomist nation state” that inevitably led to national struggles (Bauer Reference Bauer2000, 274–275).

History has taken a different course. The international order following World War Two is organized around (nation-)states, while the international human (and minority) rights system centers around individual, rather than collective, rights. Yet, besides the theorizing by Renner and Bauer, the concept of NCA/NTA has been integral to European debates on diversity. A manifestation of the notion’s appeal can be found in the activities of the Congress of European Nationalities in the 1920s, inspired by Renner and Bauer:while not denying territorial frontiers, its proponents considered the nation-state model (with one community’s “ownership” of a territory) as grossly inadequate to meet the needs of intermingled ethnic communities (Smith and Hiden Reference Smith and Hiden2012). Moreover, there have been various forms of experimentation with NTA, including in Habsburg Austria (Kuzmany Reference Kuzmany2016), interwar Estonia (Smith Reference Smith2016), and the Baltic states more generally (Smith and Hiden Reference Smith and Hiden2012). In some states—such as Ukraine and Latvia—while not formally introduced, NTA was widely debated (Liber Reference Liber1987; Germane Reference Germane, Nimni, Osipov and Smith2013). Soviet Russia ultimately opted for a system of TA (ethno-territorial federalism) to regulate its ethnic diversity, yet NTA concepts re-emerged in the post-Soviet period, as new institutional designs were devised following the Communist regime’s collapse. NTA legislation was also introduced in other post-communist countries of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) (most notably Hungary, Serbia, and Estonia), while similar legislative reform was debated in others (as in Romania; see Decker Reference Decker2007). To Nimni (Reference Nimni, Nimni, Osipov and Smith2013), that CEE has adopted NTA models amounts to a “paradigm shift” in the conceptualization of democratic practice and self-determination. NTA is approached by theorists, such as Nimni, from the perspective of diversity preservation and as a challenge to the assimilationist nation-state which, through majority rule, is seen to perpetuate a democratic deficit in the representation of national minorities.

While Renner and Bauer were the first to propose national cultural autonomy as a distinct, unique system of diversity accommodation, regimes displaying NTA elements had already emerged. In particular, the Ottoman millet system is often considered a form of NTA (Erk Reference Erk, Malloy and Palermo2015; Barkey and Gavrilis Reference Barkey and Gavrilis2016). Today, NTA is seen as an umbrella term, whose exact scope is variously interpreted both by scholars and practitioners.Footnote 1 This is unsurprising, considering that the expression “autonomy” is itself the subject of debate. NTA regimes tend to have in common the regulation of “cultural affairs” (such as minority-language educational institutions and media) through legally recognized (and generally elected) representative bodies that fulfil functions delegated by the state (Hofmann Reference Hofmann2006, 11). At the same time, the elasticity of NTA in theory and practice has led to its being applied to a range of associated regimes. In particular, it is often conflated with the minority rights system (Malloy Reference Malloy, Malloy, Osipov and Vizi2015; Salat Reference Salat, Malloy, Osipov and Vizi2015) while also partially overlapping with consociationalism. Moreover, NTA is linked to various systems de-territorializing self-determination in plurinational states, such as special regimes for indigenous peoples or partial juridical autonomy for religious communities. These varied manifestations—and interpretations—attest to the multi-faceted and evolving nature of NTA, as well as clear attempts, in different contexts and locations, to accommodate diversity through democratic means. Yet, this variance complicates the crystallization of NTA’s exact features and functions. If we consider NTA as the institutionalization of (at least some) autonomy for national minorities in cultural matters, it transcends the European context, with examples found worldwide, and clearly precedes Renner and Bauer’s writings.

Functionality and Underlying Meanings: From Macro to Micro Perspectives

Given NTA’s fuzzy contours, studies have sought to dissipate the conceptual mist surrounding the notion. Malloy (Reference Malloy, Malloy, Osipov and Vizi2015) sees the literature on NTA as reflecting three different perspectives, linked to three strands of research: nationalism studies (Bauer Reference Bauer2000; Nimni, Osipov, and Smith Reference Nimni, Nimni, Osipov and Smith2013); conflict studies (Coakley Reference Coakley1994; Roach Reference Roach2005); and diversity management (Gál Reference Gál2002; Légaré and Suksi Reference Légaré and Suksi2008; Smith and Cordell Reference Smith and Cordell2008). Besides classifications based on academic disciplines, various other trends are discernible.

A distinction can be made between studies that analyze NTA and NCA mechanisms in a broad sense and those whose focus is the original (Renner and Bauer’s) model and its potential adaptation to contemporary society. A seminal volume, edited by Nimni (Reference Nimni and Nimni2005a)—which provided, for the first time, an English translation of Renner’s article “State and Nation”—takes the original NCA model as the starting point for reflection, drawing comparisons with existing regimes. Nimni stresses NCA’s relevance for the international academic (and policy) community, given its potential contribution to responses to current crises, by transcending the limitations of (nation-)states. In the same volume, critics simultaneously identify what they consider the model’s shortcomings: an underlying perennialist approach to identity, linked to the principle of exclusionary choice of ethnic affiliation (which may entrench societal divisions); groupistFootnote 2 assumptions that can accompany NCA (Bauböck Reference Bauböck and Nimni2005); and, in Kymlicka’s (Reference Kymlicka and Nimni2005) opinion, the nonviability of mechanisms that are exclusively NCA-based in the case of sizeable, territorially concentrated minorities.

Nimni’s volume was an initial, highly valuable contribution to elucidating the significance of NCA. Subsequent studies had a broader scope, encompassing forms of nonterritorial autonomy (NTA) more generally rather than exclusively cultural autonomy. These studies eschewed considerations on the original model’s complexities, yet they followed a similar structure to Nimni’s volume, seeking both greater conceptual clarity and outlining an increasing number of case studies (on NTA exclusively or combining TA and NTA). These include a range of CEE cases as well as regimes presenting NTA elements, such as those of Maori in New Zealand, Sami in Norway, and French-speakers (outside Québec) in Canada (Semb Reference Semb2005; Nimni, Osipov, and Smith Reference Nimni, Nimni, Osipov and Smith2013; Salat et al. Reference Salat, Constantin, Osipov and Székely2014; Malloy and Palermo Reference Malloy and Palermo2015; Malloy, Osipov, and Vizi Reference Malloy, Osipov and Vizi2015; Coakley Reference Coakley2016a; Falch, Selle, and Strømsne Reference Falch, Selle and Strømsne2016; Hill Reference Hill2016).

In order to delineate NTA’s scope and significance, these studies have looked for patterns, developed classifications, and generally attempted to crystallize NTA’s features. Given the overlap with minority rights more generally, Malloy et al. (Reference Malloy, Osipov and Vizi2015) identify institutions as the primary factor that distinguishes NTA from other regimes. Classifications based on levels of effectiveness are, similarly, linked by Malloy et al. (Reference Malloy, Osipov and Vizi2015)to institutionalized channels regulating autonomy through diffusion of powers from the state. Comparably, Coakley (Reference Coakley2016a, Reference Coakley2016b) sought to analyze, through a range of case studies, objectives and characteristics of NTA systems. These studies have further highlighted factors for success of NTA regimes: Malloy et al. (Reference Malloy, Osipov and Vizi2015) classified NTA models on the basis of their “voice,” on a spectrum ranging from functioning self-governing institutions to merely “symbolic” policies (“nonvoice”).Footnote 3 These efforts have contributed to the understanding of NTA—and its dynamic interaction with TA—although whether some such cases ought to be classified as examples of “autonomy” at all is still a subject of debate (Salat et al. Reference Salat, Constantin, Osipov and Székely2014).

By focusing on NTA’s types, functions, and effectiveness, these studies veer toward pragmatism. Their aim is diversity preservation and the unravelling of processes that (may) enable it, rather than presenting NTA’s normative value. Overall, these studies show that the benefits to national minorities deriving from NTA are often modest. NTA mechanisms are often characterized by precariousness and opacity as well as a difficulty in pinning down concrete rights stemming from them. An example is NTA’s institutional weakness in Russia and Estonia (classified by Malloy et al. [Reference Malloy, Osipov and Vizi2015] as “nonvoice”). In fact, Kymlicka (Reference Kymlicka and Nimni2005 143–145) contends that the resurgence of NTA in CEE likely derives from its being less far-reaching (and thereby more socially “acceptable”) than TA, the latter being often regarded as threatening the integrity of post-communist states. Thus, NTA-based concessions may be instrumentalized primarily to preempt calls for TA (or outright secession).

At the same time, it is exactly NTA’s malleability as a negotiating tool that generates its allure. As Coakley notes, NTA has been described it as a ““magic bullet” in the armory of those seeking to cope with problems of ethnic diversity and conflict” (Reference Coakley2016a, 166). Roshwald describes it as “a promising alternative […] situated at the golden midpoint between Balkanization and banalization” (2007, 373)Footnote 4 As a “happy medium,” it can circumvent a winner-takes-all, zero-sum scenario that often characterizes the escalation of inter-ethnic conflict. Unsurprisingly, NTA has been incorporated into soft law instruments of the international minority rights regime.Footnote 5

Yet, the enthusiasm around NTA’s potentialities has often been unmatched by practice. A range of scholars have referred to the underwhelming impact on minority policies or self-governance, resulting in NTA’s “utilitarian uselessness” (in relation to Russia, see Osipov Reference Osipov2010, 31) and in legal provisions amounting to a “dead letter” (Estonia; see Lagerspetz Reference Lagerspetz2014, 471). Others, even in the context of unimpressive scenarios, have sought to highlight NTA’s (discreet) benefits, including the “symbolic” policies dismissed by Malloy et al. (Reference Malloy, Osipov and Vizi2015): for example, with reference to the same cases of Russia and Estonia, and despite limited practical benefits, NTA has been seen as providing for the relevant institutions’ recognition as legitimate representative bodies, resulting in enhanced status and some access to state organs (Prina Reference Prina2020; Prina, Smith, and Molnar Sansum Reference Prina, Smith, Sansum, Hogan-Brun and O’Rourke2019). Others again have pointed to incipient practices that signal growing recognition of NTA-related rights: a clear example is the extension of linguistic rights to French-speakers outside Québec through the application of NTA principles in the form of “institutional completeness.” The notion relates to institutions providing services to minority communities in their languages, a right that has been increasingly recognized in Canadian jurisprudence (Chouinard Reference Chouinard2014).Footnote 6 The benefits of NTA in the context of indigenous peoples’ rights has further been highlighted with reference to solutions that, for the most part, transcend territoriality, given obstacles to land restitution following past dispossessions. An example is New Zealand’s Maori and their autonomist aspirations which, while continuing to recognize the importance of land, have tended to refocus on collectivities and the management of their own affairs, including in the realms of health, welfare, and service provisions (Hill Reference Hill2016).

These studies have either focused solely on NTA or generally treated “autonomy” as encompassing both TA and NTA. The latter approach (e.g., Malloy and Palermo Reference Malloy and Palermo2015; Salat et al. Reference Salat, Constantin, Osipov and Székely2014) has inter alia highlighted that the two regimes can be interlocking and mutually supportive: NTA can complement—or reduce possible shortcomings of—TA mechanisms, either through concerted action or by serving different functions (e.g., in the cases of Canada, Russia and BelgiumFootnote 7). Indeed, scholars such as Bauböck (Reference Bauböck and Nimni2005 98) and Kymlicka (Reference Kymlicka and Nimni2005 138) argue that NTA should be treated as a supplement of, rather than an alternative to, TA.Footnote 8

More speculative publications have suggested that NTA-inspired solutions may break impasses in instances of prolonged (sometimes seemingly intractable) inter-ethnic discord. Proposals have related to Israel (Peled Reference Peled, Nimni, Osipov and Smith2013), the Kurds in the Middle East (Gunes Reference Gunes, Nimni, Osipov and Smith2013; Gunes and Gürer Reference Gunes, Gürer, Nimni and Aktprak2018), Cyprus (Dundas Reference Dundas2004), and Canada’s indigenous peoples (Nieguth Reference Nieguth2009)—treating NTA as yielding untapped potential. Some have considered the application of forms of NTA with a view to promoting Roma rights at the state (Lajcakova Reference Lajcakova2010) but also international level (Klímová-Alexander Reference Klímová-Alexander and Nimni2005).Footnote 9

Besides the focus on functionality (or potential functionality), NTA research has been approached from a different perspective. In particular, studies have analyzed what NTA practices tell us about societies in which they develop, unravelling NTA-related dynamics in their interaction with socio-political and historical circumstances rather than a possible discrepancy between the nominal and the real. Indeed, while NTA literature has tended to focus on “what could and should be, rather than what actually exists” (italics in original; Osipov Reference Osipov2010 30), these studies allow for broader considerations regarding public attitudes and expectations on minority protection regimes. They encompass research on post-communist and post-Soviet systems, characterized as forms of “NCA” by the governments and communities that embrace them, and consider the role of Soviet legacies in determining particular (NTA-related) policies. Osipov (Reference Osipov2004) produced one such study with a thick description of Russia’s NTA. Later, the studies by Smith, Prina, and Molnar Sansum (Smith Reference Prina, Smith, Sansum, Hogan-Brun and O’Rourke2019; Molnar Sansum Reference Molnar Sansum2017; Prina Reference Prina2020; Prina, Smith, and Molnar Sansum Reference Prina, Smith, Sansum, Nimni and Aktprak2018) also followed a bottom-up approach through interviews, seeking to establish not (only) the effectiveness of the institutions (or, in most cases, sources of ineffectiveness) but what “cultural autonomy” means in practice in specific contexts. In the context of “what actually exists,” these studies have further considered instances of NTA “distortion,” or its hijacking from a diversity-accommodation tool to state-centric approaches.Footnote 10

Unresolved Questions and Future Research

Despite the scholarship’s progress in recent years, aspects of NTA present challenges and continue to raise questions. These relate to the interaction of territoriality and nonterritoriality, collective rights and participation, and potential collateral damage deriving from NTA. First, if we go back to the view that TA should be regarded a supplement of—rather than an alternative to—TA, future scholarship could contribute to clarifying how the two interact in hybrid systems. The dynamics of dual systems are often complex, as exemplified by the case of Belgium, a decentralized federal state that is organized both on the basis of territories (TA) and distinct language communities (NTA) (Farrell and van Langenhove Reference Farrell, Langenhove and Nimni2005).Footnote 11 While NTA and TA elements function in tandem in the Belgian system, there are, at times, expectations that the two should operate as distinct systems given their different aims, and concerns of mutual encroachment—for example, that the introduction of NTA may reduce acquired rights based on territoriality.Footnote 12

A related issue concerns extra-territorial arrangements which are, however, short of post-territoriality, the latter understood as the transcendence of an ancestral link to territory. Such a link, Smith (Reference Smith1996 453–454) argues, is nurtured by collective memories which, in the construction of a nation, attach themselves to definite territories, creating “ethnic landscapes” (or “ethnoscapes”) perceived as historic homelands. In the context of NTA, these scenarios can lead to the conundrum of establishing nonterritorial mechanisms in the presence of a powerful, emotional attachment to a territory (and the impracticality of “de-territorializing” minority identities [Kymlicka Reference Kymlicka2007b, 388]). Nimni (Reference Nimni and Nimni2005a, 244) argues that this tension may be mitigated by acknowledging the centrality of territory and homeland to multiple communities without one group claiming exclusive control over it. Future research could focus on the intersection of NTA and territorial attachment, asking whether and how trust-building mechanisms and multicultural practices might promote “shared ethnoscapes,” including in (post-)conflict scenarios.

Second, NTA implies the exercise of rights as a collectivity. The question of group rights for national minorities remains highly complex as well as controversial (e.g., Pentassuglia Reference Pentassuglia2018). Collective rights have been linked to recognition as a collective entity; this is both recognition of the social significance of communities (and their identity) as well as guarantees of minority representation at the state level. The latter has been advocated to address democratic deficits that may marginalize minorities to privilege majorities in nation-states (Payero-López and Nimni Reference Payero-López, Nimni and Pentassuglia2018; see also Nimni Reference Nimni and Nimni2005a, 239).

Issues linked to minority participation and representation remain largely unresolved and exceedingly challenging, as they derive from a collision of interests that, in the case of NTA institutions, can manifest at two levels: between the state and minority communities as well as between a community (ethnic leaders at its apex) and individual (regular) members. In the first case, the state may influence, or effectively regulate, (often nominal) NTA mechanisms. For example, Poleshchuk (Reference Poleshchuk, Malloy, Osipov and Vizi2015, 248) argues that “cultural autonomy” is interpreted in present-day Estonia merely as a “special right of association” of ethnic minorities, which depends upon the “political will and voluntarism of the authorities.” These processes are removed from (bottom-up) mechanisms for “effective participation” envisaged by the international minority rights system.Footnote 13 NTA regimes can find themselves in an untenable position as they are part of an institutional framework designed by the state (sometimes with little or no minority participation) yet ought to operate independently from it (to activate autonomy). Interaction between state organs and NTA institutions often occurs in the presence of power differentials between the state (/majority population) and minorities.

In the second case (of differing interests between community leaders and regular members), ethnic entrepreneurs act as gatekeepers and may engage in “ethnobusiness,” instrumentalizing minority policies for personal benefit (Carstocea Reference Carstocea, Mansfeldová and Pleines2011). This question’s complexity, and difficulties in determining a “collective will,” is also addressed in the minority rights literature, which has highlighted the vital importance of a “link of accountability” between represented (minority communities) and their representatives (Verstichel Reference Verstichel2008). In the case of NTA, a tension emerges between the oft-criticized “rigidity” (the fact that ethnicity-based affiliations may result in essentializing tendencies) and (overly) fluid systems that obfuscate who the stakeholders are and to whom ethnic leaders are accountable. Some studies have looked at the resulting impairment of NTA institutions’ internal democracy (Prina Reference Prina2012; Prina, Smith, and Molnar Sansum Reference Prina, Smith, Sansum, Nimni and Aktprak2018); more studies are needed to further analyze bottom-up activism in the framework of NTA, in different political ((semi-)autocratic or democratic) contexts, and minority (dis)empowerment.

Indeed, alongside NTA’s (in)effectiveness, research should aim to expose its potential collateral damage. Limited scholarship has considered NTA’s “hidden transcripts” (Osipov Reference Osipov2012) or corrosive practices that may be counterproductive. For example, if what the state presents as “cultural autonomy” is a “fictitious” form of “autonomy” (Prina Reference Prina2016, 180–201), it may create a democratic façade that, in practice, undermines open debate; there may also be a presumption of representation of the collectivity’s concerns while, in reality, institutions are appropriated by the state through their members’ co-optation.

An additional form of potential collateral damage is the entrenchment of societal divisions by hardening perceived ethnic boundaries. To this concern, Nimni (Reference Nimni and Nimni2005a, 243) responds that tensions originate not from separate group identities per se but from the privileges afforded to dominant nations. Yet differing (ethnicity-based) regimes—including group-differentiated rights (Kymlicka Reference Kymlicka2007a)—may lead to suspicions of injustice in the distribution of material and nonmaterial resources (including political, social, and symbolic capital). A counterargument is that the continuous interaction of communities envisaged by NTA (and TA) systems leads to debate, cooperation, and, ultimately, compromise rather than division (Farrell and van Langenhove Reference Farrell, Langenhove and Nimni2005).

The foregoing must be considered in light of new international developments. The centrality of the nation-state is moderated by the centrifugal forces of globalization and regionalism, along with a new emphasis on multi-level governance (Hooghe and Marks Reference Hooghe and Marks2001), which brings to the fore subnational actors and interest groups. These developments raise new potentialities for NTA in the context of supra-national institutions, such as the EU (Klímová-Alexander Reference Klímová-Alexander and Nimni2005; Roach Reference Roach2005). At the same time, the dynamism of diversity calls for nuanced and fluid regimes: transnational links furthered by the rapid development of information technology increasingly enable individuals to cultivate identities in countries of origin (or of ethnic belonging) as well as countries of residence; and alterations to a state’s ethnic composition through recent immigration may destabilize (more or less) consolidated forms of NTA, resulting in a need for revision. Finally, NTA dynamics have to be analyzed in the context of the recent rise of right-wing populism as a near-global phenomenon: right-wing positions forcefully imply assimilation or exclusion, and are located at the opposite end of the spectrum of cultural autonomy for minorities.

Conclusion

Renner and Bauer’s attempt to salvage in extremis the Austro-Hungarian empire might have been too little too late. At the same time, Nimni (Reference Nimni and Nimni2005b, 2) argues that, since Renner’s “State and Nation,” it is striking “how little we have advanced […] in accommodating the collective rights of national minorities within a single state.” Diversity accommodation remains problematic, particularly for communities that are spatially dispersed, while populations divided by ethnic antagonisms create a potential for conflict. Renner and Bauer’s concerns have a clear contemporary resonance. Meanwhile, historical NTA cases (such as in the Baltic states) remind us of debates, now over a century old, aiming to promote “a democratic and multinational vision of statehood” (ultimately obfuscated by the rise of the nation-state) (Smith and Hiden Reference Smith and Hiden2012, 9).

Despite NTA practices’ existing shortcomings, outlined in this article, NTA’s normative value stems from the transcendence of a taken-for-granted, and exclusive, link between a nation and “its” territory. In this context, NTA research (combined or not with TA) continues to be relevant in the 21st: century: in particular, it may be reconfigured as one of the means to examine the fluid and contested spaces between the “nation-state” and multicultural society as well as the “meaningful intermediate locations” that the state, with its “totalising tendency,” may fail to recognize (Nimni Reference Nimni and Nimni2005b, 240–241). NTA research may contribute, more generally, to the evolution of debates on collective rights for communities or nations and their interaction with individual rights, particularly with reference to the vexed question of participation. Indeed, NTA brings into sharp relief the complexity of internal decision-making of representative institutions, and the interaction of the (quasi-)autonomous institutions and state organs, with reference to minority accommodation and (dis)empowerment. These areas of research would involve an approach to NTA that is flexible rather than dogmatic (Nimni Reference Nimni and Nimni2005a), eschewing attempts to (re)create rigid NTA models.

Another approach is to view NTA research as a means to analyze what actually exists (Osipov Reference Osipov2010, 30). Fine-grained analysis of societies where NTA regimes exist, employing qualitative methods, such as interviews (as in the studies referred to in this article), can reveal NTA’s deeper meanings and implications for individuals and communities. In this case, NTA-related concepts and practices are primarily treated as social phenomena and studied with reference to their intersection with socio-political circumstances and historical legacies.

Moreover, newly created or evolving systems are certainly worthy of scholarly attention. These include Canada’s “institutional completeness,” the progressive widening of the scope of NTA-related rights, and the use of NTA-like solutions for indigenous peoples in the presence of obstacles to land restitution, as in the case of Maori communities in New Zealand. New opportunities might open up at the international level, which future research ought to consider, such as the endorsement of (elements of) NTA by inter-governmental organizations and the management of inter-ethnic tensions through transnational institutions (for communities residing in multiple states, such as the Kurds and Roma—cases whose complexity require creative, possibly as yet untested, solutions). NTA may be of relevance in divided societies where impasses exist on territorial solutions to grave and incessant tensions, as for the Palestinians in Israel. NTA models may further reach spheres of minority concern inaccessible to TA mechanisms through integrated TA-NTA systems.

Other potential areas of research are: the relationship between NTA and perceptions of territory and (home)land; and the implications of NTA regimes in the construction of ethnic boundary lines, along with the question of how such boundaries can coexist with a shared civic space. Finally, highly significant is the potential for new NTA models to allow for the nonexclusivity of ethnic affiliation, reflecting on how NTA systems may operate on the basis of multiple, fluid categories. The future of NTA will likely depend on whether and how it can respond to the challenges of “superdiversity” on one side and, increasingly, right-wing populism on the other.

Disclosure.

Author has nothing to disclose.

Financial Support.

Research for this article was made possible by the project “National Minority Rights and Democratic Political Community: Practices of Non-Territorial Autonomy in Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe” (2014–2017), supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (grant number ES/L007126/1). The data has been deposited with the UK Data Service Data, Collection Number 852375.

Footnotes

1 For an overview, see Nootens (Reference Nootens, Malloy and Palermo2015, 34–45)

2 An expectation of internal homogeneity of groups. See Osipov (Reference Osipov2010 29).

3 The volume’s conclusions link effectiveness to appropriate legal standing, bottom-up activism, and adequate funding (Salat Reference Salat, Malloy, Osipov and Vizi2015, 270).

4 That is, between state fragmentation along ethnic lines through a “parochial approach to politics” and a superficial approach to diversity (Roshwald Reference Roshwald2007, 367)

5 See Principles 17–18 of the Lund Recommendations, OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities (1999).

6 Some studies have also focused on the significance of NTA with reference to one aspect of diversity, namely, multilingualism (Prina, Smith, and Molnar Sansum Reference Prina, Smith, Sansum, Hogan-Brun and O’Rourke2019)

7 See the next section on Belgium.

8 Kymlicka (Reference Kymlicka2007b, 388) refers to the two approaches as “compatibilist” (NTA as part of a system also encompassing TA) and “oppositional” (NTA as a substitute of TA).

9 In other cases, authors have asked why NTA was not applied in particular contexts despite the presence of seemingly propitious conditions (such as Northern Ireland [Coakley, Reference Coakley, Nimni, Osipov and Smith2013]).

10 See below (“collateral damage”).

11 For example, in Canada, TA for Québec coexists with nonterritorial linguistic and cultural rights for French-speakers residing outside the province. In Finland, ethnic Swedes benefit from TA in the Åland Islands and from nonterritorial linguistic and cultural rights outside it. TA and NTA mechanisms also coexist in Russia and Belgium.

12 In Russia, for example, the introduction of NTA (in the shape of national cultural autonomy) engendered concerns that it would cause the undoing of the country’s TA mechanisms (ethnic federalism).

13 On this, see inter alia Henrard (Reference Henrard2005), Verstichel (Reference Verstichel2008), and Weller and Nobbs (Reference Weller and Nobbs2010).

References

Barkey, Karen, and Gavrilis, George. 2016. “The Ottoman Millet System: Non-Territorial Autonomy and its Contemporary Legacy.” Ethnopolitics 15 (1): 2442.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bauböck, Rainer. 2005. “Political Autonomy or Cultural Minority Rights: A Conceptual Critique of Renner’s Model.” In National Cultural Autonomy and its Contemporary Critics, edited by Nimni, Ephraim, 97111. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bauer, Otto. 2000. The Question of Nationalities and Social Democracy. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Originally published as Die Nationalitätenfrage und die Sozialdemokratie (Vienna: verlag der Wiener Volksbuchhandlung, 1924).Google Scholar
Carstocea, Andreea. 2011. ““Ethno-Business”: The Unexpected Consequence of National Minority Policies in Romania.” In Informal Relations from Democratic Representation to Corruption Case studies from Central and Eastern Europe, edited by Mansfeldová, Zdenka and Pleines, Heiko163183. Stuttgart: Ibidem-Verlag.Google Scholar
Chouinard, Stéphanie. 2014. “The Rise of Non-territorial Autonomy in Canada: Towards a Doctrine of Institutional Completeness in the Domain of Minority Language Rights.” Ethnopolitics 13 (2): 141158.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coakley, John. 1994. “Approaches to the Resolution of Ethnic Conflict: The Strategy of Non-Territorial Autonomy.” International Political Science Review 15 (3): 297314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coakley, John. 2013. “Non-Territorial Autonomy: A Non-Option for Northern Ireland?” In The Challenge of Non-territorial Autonomy: Theory and Practice, edited by Nimni, EphraimOsipov, Alexander, and Smith, David J.5570. Bern: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Coakley, John. 2016a. “Conclusion: Patterns of Non-Territorial Autonomy.” Ethnopolitics 15 (1): 166185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coakley, John. 2016b. “Introduction: Dispersed Minorities and Non-territorial Autonomy.” Ethnopolitics 15 (1): 123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Decker, D. Christopher. 2007. “The Use of Cultural Autonomy to Prevent Conflict and Meet the Copenhagen Criteria: The Case of RomaniaEthnopolitics 6 (3): 437450.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dundas, Guy. 2004. “Cyprus from 1960 to EU Accession: the Case for Non-Territorial Autonomy.” Australian Journal of Politics and History 50 (1): 8694.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Erk, Jan. 2015. “Non-Territorial Millets in Ottoman History.” In Minority Accommodation through Territorial and Non-Territorial Autonomy, edited by Malloy, Tove H. and Palermo, Francesco119131. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Falch, Torvald, Selle, Per, and Strømsne, Kristin. 2016. “The Sámi: 25 Years of Indigenous Authority in Norway.” Ethnopolitics 15 (1): 125143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Farrell, Mary, and Langenhove, Luk van. 2005. “Towards Cultural Autonomy in Belgium.” In National Cultural Autonomy and its Contemporary Critics, edited by Nimni, Ephraim, 222236. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Gál, Kinga, ed. 2002. Minority Governance in Europe. Budapest: Open Society Institute.Google Scholar
Germane, Marina. 2013. “Paul Schiemann, Max Laserson and Cultural Autonomy: A Study from Interwar Latvia.” In The Challenge of Non-territorial Autonomy: Theory and Practice, edited by Nimni, EphraimOsipov, Alexander, and Smith, David J.101115. Oxford: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Gunes, Cengiz. 2013. “Accommodating Kurdish Demands in Turkey.” In The Challenge of Non-territorial Autonomy: Theory and Practice, edited by Nimni, EphraimOsipov, Alexander, and Smith, David J.7184. Oxford: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Gunes, Cengiz, and Gürer, Çetin. 2018. “Kurdish Movement’s Democratic Autonomy Proposals in Turkey.” In Democratic Representation in Plurinational States The Kurds in Turkey, edited by Nimni, Ephraim and Aktprak, Elçin159175. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henrard, Kristin. 2005. ““Participation”, “Representation” and “Autonomy” in the Lund Recommendations and the Reflections in the Supervision of the FCNM and Several Human Rights Conventions.” International Journal on Minority and Group Rights 12: 133168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hill, Richard S. 2016. “New Zealand Maori: The Quest for Indigenous Autonomy.” Ethnopolitics 15 (1): 144165.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hofmann, Rainer. 2006. “Political Participation of Minorities.” European Yearbook of Minority Issues 6: 517.Google Scholar
Hooghe, Liesbet, and Marks, Gary. 2001. Multi-level Governance and European Integration. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield.Google Scholar
Klímová-Alexander, Ilona. 2005. “Prospects for Romani National Cultural Autonomy.” In National Cultural Autonomy and Its Contemporary Critics, edited by Nimni, Ephraim124134. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Kuzmany, Börries. 2016. “Habsburg Austria: Experiments in Non-Territorial Autonomy.” Ethnopolitics 15 (1): 4365.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kymlicka, Will. 2005. “Renner and the Accommodation of Sub-state Nationalisms.” In National Cultural Autonomy and Its Contemporary Critics, edited by Nimni, Ephraim137149. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Kymlicka, Will. 2007a. Multicultural Odysseys: Navigating the New International Politics of Diversity. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kymlicka, Will. 2007b. “National Cultural Autonomy and International Minority Rights Norms.” Ethnopolitics 6 (3): 379393.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lagerspetz, Mark. 2014. “Cultural Autonomy of National Minorities in Estonia: The Erosion of a Promise.” Journal of Baltic Studies 45 (3): 457475.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lajcakova, Jarmila. 2010. “Advancing Empowerment of the Roma in Slovakia through a Non-territorial National Autonomy.” Ethnopolitics 9 (2): 171196.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Légaré, André, and Suksi, Markku. 2008. “Introduction: Rethinking the Forms of Autonomy at the Dawn of the 21st Century.” International Journal on Minority and Group Rights 15: 143155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liber, George. 1987. “Ukrainian Nationalism and the 1918 Law on National-Personal Autonomy George Liber.” Nationalities Papers 15 (1): 2242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malloy, Tove H. 2015. “Introduction.” In Managing Diversity through Non-Territorial Autonomy: Assessing Advantages, Deficiencies, and Risks, edited by Malloy, Tove H., Osipov, Alexander, and Vizi, Balázs, 115. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malloy, Tove H., Osipov, Alexander, and Vizi, Balázs, eds. 2015. Managing Diversity through Non-territoral Autonomy: Assessing Advantages, Deficiencies and Risks. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malloy, Tove H., and Palermo, Francesco, eds. 2015. Minority Accommodation through Territorial and Non-Territorial Autonomy. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Molnar Sansum, Judit. 2017. “Az 1993-as magyarországi kisebbségi törvény parlamenti vitája” [The Parliamentary Debate on the Hungarian Minorities Act of 1993]. Regio 25 (3): 182202.Google Scholar
Nieguth, Tim. 2009. “An Austrian Solution for Canada? Problems and Possibilities of National Cultural Autonomy.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 42 (1): 116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nimni, Ephraim. 2005a. “Conclusion: The Sovereign Predicament of Dispersed Nations.” In National Cultural Autonomy and Its Contemporary Critics, edited by Nimni, Ephraim237253. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Nimni, Ephraim. 2005b. “Introduction: The National Cultural Autonomy Model Revisited.” In National Cultural Autonomy and Its Contemporary Critics, edited by Nimni, Ephraim114. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Nimni, Ephraim, ed. 2005c. Natural Cultural Autonomy and its Contemporary Critics. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Nimni, Ephraim. 2013. “The Conceptual Challenge of Non-Territorial Autonomy.” In The Challenge of Non-territorial Autonomy: Theory and Practice, edited by Nimni, EphraimOsipov, AlexanderSmith, David J.124. Bern: Peter Lang.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nimni, EphraimOsipov, Alexander, and Smith, David J., eds. 2013. The Challenge of Non-Territorial Autonomy: Theory and Practice. Bern: Peter Lang.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nootens, Geneviève. 2015. “Can Non-Territorial Autonomy Bring Added Value to Theoretical and Policy-Oriented Analysis of Ethnic Politics?” In Minority Accommodation through Territorial and Non-Territorial Autonomy, edited by Malloy, Tove H. and Palermo, Francesco3355. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities. 1999. The Lund Recommendations on the Effective Participation of National Minorities in Public Life & Explanatory Note. The Hague: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe.Google Scholar
Osipov, Alexander. 2004. Natsionalno-Kulturnaya Avtonomiya: Idei, Resheniya, Instituty [National Cultural Autonomy: Ideas, Decisions, Institutions]. St. Petersburg: Centre for Independent Sociological Research.Google Scholar
Osipov, Alexander. 2010. “National Cultural Autonomy in Russia: A Case of Symbolic Law.” Review of Central and East European Law 35: 2757.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osipov, Alexander. 2012. “Implementation Unwanted? Symbolic vs. Instrumental Policies in the Russian Management of Ethnic Diversity.” Perspectives on European Politics and Society 13 (4): 425442.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Payero-López, Lucía, and Nimni, Ephraim. 2018. “The Liberal Democratic Deficit in Minority Representation: The Case of Spain.” In Ethno-Cultural Diversity and Human Rights: Challenges and Critiques, edited by Pentassuglia, Gaetano90121. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Peled, Yoav. 2013. “Challenging Zionism through Non-territorial Autonomy: From Vilna to Nazareth.” In The Challenge of Non-territorial Autonomy: Theory and Practice, edited by by Nimni, Ephraim, Osipov, AlexanderSmith, David J.3954. Bern: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Pentassuglia, Gaetano, ed. 2018. Ethno-Cultural Diversity and Human Rights: Challenges and Critiques. Leiden: Brill.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poleshchuk, Vadim. 2015. “Russian National Cultural Autonomy in Estonia.” In Managing Diversity through Non-territorial Autonomy, edited by Malloy, Tove H., Osipov, Alexander, and Vizi, Balázs, 229248. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prina, Federica. 2012. “Power, Politics and Participation: The Russian Federation’s National Minorities and their Participatory Rights.” Netherlands Quarterly of Human Rights 30 (1): 6696.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prina, Federica. 2016. National Minorities in Putin’s Russia: Diversity and Assimilation. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Prina, Federica. 2018. “National in Form, Putinist in Content: Minority Institutions “Outside Politics.”” Europe-Asia Studies 70 (8): 12361263.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prina, Federica. “The Mechanics of Consensus: Non-Territorial National Cultural Autonomy and the Russian State.” Nationalities Papers. Published online ahead of print January 7, 2020. doi: 10.1017/nps.2018.39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prina, Federica, Smith, David J., and Sansum, Judit Molnar. 2018. “National Cultural Autonomy in Central and Eastern Europe: Challenges and Possibilities.” In Democratic Representation in Plurinational States: The Kurds in Turkey, edited by Nimni, Ephraim and Aktprak, Elçin85111. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prina, Federica, Smith, David J., and Sansum, Judit Molnar. 2019. “National Cultural Autonomy and Linguistic Rights in Central and Eastern Europe.” In Handbook on Minority Languages and Communities, edited by Hogan-Brun, Gabrielle and O’Rourke, Bernardette181205. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Renner, Karl. 2005. “State and Nation.” In National Cultural Autonomy and its Contemporary Critics, edited by Nimni, Ephraim1547. London: Routledge. Originally published as Synopticus (pseudonym), Staat und Nation: Zur österreichischen Nationalitätenfrag (Vienna 1899).Google Scholar
Roach, Stephen C. 2005. Cultural Autonomy, Minority Rights, and Globalization. Burlington: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Roshwald, Aviel. 2007. “Between Balkanization and Banalization: Dilemmas of Ethno-cultural Diversity.” Ethnopolitics 6 (3): 365378.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salat, Levente, Constantin, Sergiu, Osipov, Alexander, and Székely, István G., eds. 2014. Autonomy Arrangements around the World: A Collection of Well and Lesser Known Cases. Cluj-Napoca: Romanian Institute for Research on National Minorities.Google Scholar
Salat, Levente. 2015. “Conclusion.” In Managing Diversity through Non-Territorial Autonomy, edited by Malloy, Tove H., Osipov, Alexander, and Vizi, Balázs, 249273. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Semb, Anne J. 2005. “Sami Self-determination in the Making?Nations and Nationalism 11 (4): 531549.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, Anthony D. 1996. “Culture, Community and Territory: The Politics of Ethnicity and Nationalism.” International Affairs 72 (3): 439458.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, David J.The “Quadratic Nexus” Revisited: Nation-building in Estonia through the Prism of National Cultural Autonomy.” Nationalities Papers. Published online ahead of print on November 22, 2019. doi: 10.1017/nps.2018.38.Google Scholar
Smith, David J. 2016. “Estonia: A Model for Interwar Europe?Ethnopolitics 15 (1): 89104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, David J., and Cordell, Karl, eds. 2008. Cultural Autonomy in Contemporary Europe. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Smith, David J., and Hiden, John. 2012. Ethnic Diversity and the Nation State: National Cultural Autonomy Revisited. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Verstichel, Annelies. 2008. “Representation and Identity: The Right of Persons Belonging to Minorities to Effective Participation in Public Affairs.” European Yearbook of Minority Issues 7: 449466.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weller, Marc, and Nobbs, Katherine, eds. 2010. Political Participation of Minorities: A Commentary on International Standards and Practice. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar