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13 Can. J. L. & Jurisprudence 207 (2000)
Federalism and Secession: At Home and Abroad

handle is hein.journals/caljp13 and id is 209 raw text is: Federalism and Secession:
At Home and Abroad
Will Kymlicka
The history of ethnic relations in Western democracies contains many examples
of injustice, oppression, coercion, discrimination and prejudice. Yet over the past
thirty years, Western democracies have developed a number of interesting, and I
believe effective, models for accommodating ethnocultural diversity. One of these
models involves the use of federal or quasi-federal forms of territorial autonomy
to enable self-government for national minorities and indigenous peoples. I believe
that these forms of territorial autonomy are in general a success, and contain poten-
tial lessons for other countries around the world struggling with issues of minority
nationalism.
The merits of these models have often been under-estimated, in part because
many people measure success by what I believe is an inappropriate criterion:
namely, the absence of secessionist mobilization. Many people believe that any
reform of the state can only be declared a success if it removes secession from the
political agenda, and indeed makes the very idea of secession unthinkable. By this
standard, many Western countries which have adopted territorial autonomy are far
from successful, since they contain active and influential secessionist movements.
However, I believe that this cannot be the standard for evaluating democratic
multination states. In this paper, I will try to explain why. I will begin by explaining
what I take to be the main outlines of a common Western approach to territorial
autonomy (section 1). There are of course many differences amongst the Western
nations, but I will try to show that there have been several important areas of con-
vergence in recent decades, which can usefully be seen as defining a distinctively
Western approach to the issue. I will also argue that the success of this approach
may be related, in a complex way, to a particular view about the legitimacy and
perhaps even inevitability of secessionist mobilization (section 2). I will then explore
some difficulties in trying to apply this model elsewhere in the world (sections 3
and 4).
1. Federal and Quasi-Federal Forms of Autonomy in the West
As I said earlier, federal or quasi-federal forms of territorial autonomy have
increasingly been adopted in the West as a means of accommodating national
minorities. By national minorities, I mean groups that formed complete and func-
tioning societies on their historic homeland prior to being incorporated into a larger
state. National minorities can be subdivided into two categories: stateless nations
and indigenous peoples. Stateless nations are nations which do not currently have
a state in which they are a majority-a state literally to call their own-but which
may have had such a state in the past, or which may have sought such a state. They
find themselves sharing a state with other nations for a variety of reasons. They

Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence

Vol. XIII, No.2 (July 200 0)

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