Title: Politics, Society and Political Identity
1Politics, Society and Political Identity
2What is Political Identity?
- Has Identity been murdered? Is it useless
scientifically (WJM MacKenzie) - The phrase identity does not refer to an
objective phenomenon and there is no agreed
meaning. - The meaning of identity has evolved, indeed been
misused. Identity started off as meaning
sameness of two objects, in the sense of
identical. It then evolved to mean the continuity
of an individual personality, hence difference. - By extension, The phrase is a metaphor, moving
from individual to collective. - In a metaphorical sense, identity can signify a
broader use in social identity/collective
identity, the social or collective is given an
individual personality.
3Identity and the social sciences 3 classic
positions
- Cultural anthropologists, such as Margaret Mead
writing in the 1920s, use identity as culture,
to refer to whole societies. Mead assumed that
each culture was unique, consistent and binding.
Individual identity could not be comprehended
outside of a collectivity. - Cultural identity theorists became tared with
the brush of national character. - Other end of the spectrum For psychologists,
such as Erikson, identity played out within an
individual personality. - Sociologists (Goffmann), identity was only
comprehensible in a social - group - context,
since identity was shaped by interactionism. For
Goffmann the individual exists only in
situations of social interaction.
4A Compound meaning
- Whatever its initial meaning, identity has a
compound sense identity can be individual,
social (society), or collective (group). In
practice these levels interact and are mutally
entangled. - At the macro level, political identity can be
understood as common purpose, as an entity that
persists through time. - Collective forms of political identity are class,
race, religion and nation. In most cases, a
rhetoric of identity strengthens - or otherwise -
the cohesion of a group. - As a collective entity, we understand identity
as common purpose, something that persists
through time. It consists of a combination of
myths, symbols, rituals and ideology. Myths the
founding images of groups, nations, social
groups, regions. Symbols, such as flags, signs,
language rituals especially understood in a
political sense ideology coherent patterns of
belief. - But this throws up serious methodological issues
5Methodological issues
- There are methodological issues concerned here
does it apply to individuals (individual-level
analysis?) Or to collective entities (class,
gender, race and so on) ? - Can we make any assumptions about collective
entities from individual analysis? In the worst
cases, identity becomes a form of primordialism
or essentialism, in which individuals are
credited with ascriptive (that is, not chosen by
themselves) identities which are assumed to guide
behaviour - Is identity (mainly) an individual level
phenomena? If we ascribe individuals to
categories, such as class or gender, how do we
know that these are meaningful for these
individuals? - There is a tendency to use identity as a master
category, so that ethnicity or gender determine
behaviour as class once did
6Three contemporary research traditions
- Ethnographical analysis researcher as a
participant observer imbued with the culture of a
group/tribe. Individual little autonomy - Macro- Statistical analysis political culture
studies of the 1960s and studies of values of
political scientists such as Kitschelt - Post-modern analysis 1). individual has recovered
autonomy both from group and societal pressures
2). Individual chooses between identity choices
and distinctive identity markers. Identity is
constructed - Studying identity thus involves two-three
different levels of analysis 1). individual (how
do individuals mix their identities, or do
they? 2). Intermediate how are individuals
influenced by class, religion, race, ethnicity?
Societal what is the value of reasoning in terms
of political culture?
7Tradition 1. Identity as national cultures
- Almond and Verba The Civic Culture, 1963.. Modern
values-based research such as that of Inglehart - Identify broad traits of a political culture by
means of a mass survey approach - National stereotyping? Largely discredited in its
original form. The nation unit of analysis is
problematic, at least in terms of values - Link with political development discredited
today an ethnocentric approach that took the US
as the core benchmark for liberal democracy and
looked to identify the cultural conditions for
stable democracy - Deducing system-wide conclusions from questions
asked of individuals - More purchase at the level of sub-cultures (e.g.
Communist or Catholic sub-cultures)
8Tradition 2 identifying Heavy sociological
variables 1.
- Identity as forms of social cleavage. Cleavages
are social or value-based conflicts. The term
cleavage structure refers to the main lines of
political division within a society. - In their classic work, Lipset and Rokkan identify
three main sources of division within European
societies society - Anticlericalism Republic/Church , from the
French revolution and subsequent wave of
anti-clericalism across Europe (eighteenth) - Centre-Periphery, from the imperfect process of
state formation across Europe in the nineteenth
century (19th century) - Social class, inherited from the industrial
revolution and the conflict between capital and
labour, which largely structured 20th century
politics. - For Lipset and Rokkan most of the key cleavages
in place in the 1960s were in place by the late
nineteenth century their thesis on the frozen
character of cleavages remains very influential. - Different countries can be characterised by the
importance of one, or more than one cleavage
and this cleavage structure has had a very
important effect in structuring the party system.
9Heavy Sociological Variables 2
- Tim Bale identifies nine key cleavages that
structure politics in Europe today in order of
their appearance, these are - Land-industry (18th century), representing the
conflicting interests of the aristocracy and the
emerging bourgeoisie gradually victory of the
bourgeoisie and creation of bourgeois parties - owner-worker, giving rise to the classic
labour-capital division and to the birth of SD
parties - urban-rural cleavages, especially in countries
such as Norway where the urban middle classes
were of foreign extraction and the rural areas
were peopled by poor indigenous peasants
(agrarian parties, today largely disappeared) - centre-periphery (regionalist/ minority
nationalist parties) - church-state (clericalism/Christian democracay
against anti-clerical parties) - Revolution-gradualism ( Social Democracy and
Communist parties in 1917) - Democracy-totalitarianism (rise of fascists in
1930s) - modernism/post-materialism(environmental and
quality of life issues, from 1960s onwards
(Greens) - multiculturalism/homogeneity (far-right and
populism)
10Cross-cutting cleavages
- These cleavages could stand alone where there is
only one line of cleavage the normal or
residual social class one then this acts as the
fundamentally structuring element. - But other cleavages might cut across the class
one, and be more pertinent politically this can
be the case of religion, for example, where
religious behaviour is very closely associated
with a conservative orientation in most
countries, whatever social class one belongs to. - On the other hand, lower-level cleavages might be
nested in higher order cleavages thus, the
centre-periphery cleavage where minority
nations resist the construction of a state
might strengthen divisions based on social class
especially if members of a minority community are
also in an unfavourable socio-economic position. - Thus cleavages can be structuring reinforcing or
cross-cutting. - Remains seminal for considering contours of
European party system
11Tradition 3 Post-modern identity markers
- Individual chooses between identity choices and
distinctive identity markers. Identity is
constructed - It is very unusual for individuals to have only
one set of identities much more usually the case
for individual identities to be complex sets of
allegiances, some of which are reinforcing,
others not.
12Identity Markers in contemporary Europe
- The most powerful traditional identity markers
are nation, race, religion, class, territory and
language - Race has been virtually discredited as a means of
identity. Pseudo-scientific racial studies have
been discredited. Gene pools have been mixed
everwhere, depriving racial analysis of any
legitimacy. - Religion is a source of cultural and semantic
identity that we will consider below. - Nation is an obvious source of identity, as are
other forms of imagined community. - Class has everywhere been declining as a source
of identity. - Territory and language will be considered in the
next lecture
13National Identity?
- National Identity? The question of identity is
most frequently posed at the level of the
nation-state Political Culture theorists in the
1960s sought to link attitudes distributed
throughout the population with the overarching
features of political systems. These attempts at
linkage were not very successful - Nations are imagined communities each nation
has historic symbols that sometimes are reflected
in the state but not always, notably in the
case of divided societies such as Belgium, or
countries where there are strong regional
distinctions as in Spain. National identity is
constructed in rather different manners across
the key states in the EU. - National identity a set of myths, symbols,
rituals.but these are difficult to generalize,
as they vary in the context of each nation-state
- Stateless-nations?
14Problems with national identity
- Some key problems with national identities where
are the boundaries of the nation? Is it based on
blood ties or on adhesion to a common set of
values? Does the nation coincide with the
boundaries of the state? Is the nation
inclusive, or, as in the case of Nazism,
exclusive? Does national identity signify
constitutionalism nationalism? Or triumph of one
core group over another
15Social class and politics
- In Wales, studies of identity have concluded that
it is not focused principally around locality, or
language, or symbols such as flags but around
the perception that people in Wales are working
class. Here a strong sense of class identity is
more salient than anything else. Social class was
long considered - and to some extent still is -
to represent the core source of political
IDENTITY within older European nations,
especially in the UK, Germany and the Scandiavian
countries. - These nations are countries with relatively
developed social classes, and with, historically
speaking, a high degree of class consciousness.
Although in no one country have political
divisions been reduced to those of class, class
identities have generally been to some extent
predictive of political loyalties - to a greater
or lesser extent according to the existence of
other significant sources of division.
16Class as the main cleavage
- The model of residual class-based politics has
traditionally been given as that of Britain this
does not necessarily mean that class politics are
more intense in Britain than elsewhere, but it
does signify that class has usually been regarded
as the most significant indicator pointing to
political choice. - According to the findings of Butler and Stokes
in the 1960s, at the height of the two party
system, social class corresponded closely with
political choice, with industrial workers largely
favouring Labour over Conservatives (65/35), and
non-manual strata overwhelmingly favouring the
Conservatives (75-25). Indeed, class voting was
taken for granted, so much so that all else was
embellishment and detail. - Partisan and class dealignment... But class has
been perceived to be important in British
politics because there has been no other major
source of division, such as religion or
linguistic conflict (except in specific
territories)
17Class and intensity
- The British model- class as the only significant
source of identity/conflict - can be seen as the
European exception. All other countries had
rather more complicated cleavage structures
based notably on religion, on the rural/urban
dichotomy, on regional identities, on the
divisive role of language. But, even where other
sources of political division exist, social class
has usually - historically - performed an
important role as well, with class differences
often reinforcing other divisions, such as those
seperating catholics and anti-clericals. - The impact of social class must also be assessed
in terms on the intensity with which class
sentiments are held and the degree of class
conflict within a society. For example, whereas
industrial workers constituted a majority of the
population in Britain, they were never more than
a geographically concentrated and resentful
minority in France, with the result that
industrial workers came to form a strong
inward-looking sub-culture isolated from the
mainstream of French society, which for several
generations saw its salvation in the
revolutionary appeal of the Communist party.
Thus, to understand identity we need to observe
issues of intensity.
18Religion
- The church-State cleavage and the role of
religion - Opinion surveys throughout Western Europe have
repeatedly shown that religion can have a
significant impact upon how an individual
perceives of political issues, and his or her
role within the political system. Moreover,
religion often - but not always collides with
social class to reinforce loyalties adopted by
particular individuals. In Italy, for example,
the industrial working class was traditionally
been both anti-clerical (on account of the
support of the Catholic Church for the existing
social hierarchies) and left-wing (on account of
the close connection of the Church with the
former DCI).
19Declining religosity
- Religious identities come in all shapes and
sizes. In the context of European politics, the
religious/anti-clerical division has a central
place. There has been a decline in religiosity
and also a declining capacity for the Church to
intervene in politics. Gordon Smith two levels
of religious disengagement 1). The Church no
longer intervenes directly in politics, or, when
it does so, it is defeated (e.g. divorce
referendums in Italy in 1970s)2). Relationships
between religious affiliations and voting choice
begin to weaken. If the first level of religious
disengagement is general, the religious
identification is still the best indicator of
voting behaviour anti-clerical stance is
correlated with atheism and a left-wing vote,
while religious behaviour is linked to a
rightwing vote. - New religious fervour?
20Language and linguistic identity
- The process of state building in Western Europe
takes as its great reference point the French
revolution of the late eighteenth century and the
national unification movements of the nineteenth
century. The process has continued in the
twentieth century. - The role of language is important in several
respects. There has generally been a coincidence
of national state boundaries, and linguistic
entities. In certain countries - such as France
- the emergence of a strong central state was
accompanied by a gradual suppression of all
linguistic and regional identities in this
instance, the idea of nation was largely
synonymous with that of the state itself. - In Germany, by contrast, the process of
unification brought together German speakers
previously dispersed through a wide range of
separate states the Federal character of German
postwar Republic recognises the cultural and
regional diversity of the German people.
21Centre-periphery cleavages
- The rise of minority nationalism has been one of
the major developments in western European
countries in the past twenty years - In Spain, in particular, there has been a move
to a form of asymmetrical federalism, where the
three nations Catalonia, Basque Country and
Galicia are recognised as historic
nationalities in the 1978 constitution and given
extended devolved powers. - In the UK, the minority nationalist question has
been nested in a broader class cleavage in both
Scotland and Wales, national identity came as
a result of a specific feeling of class identity
and of being different from the rest of the UK. - If there are fashions, this is one. In Italy, a
move to regional evolution has accompanied more
assertive regional claims, such as that of
Padania in the north. - But much less so in central and eastern Europe
22Political Identity Using the Moreno Scale to
measure identities
23Constructing identities the case of territory
and identity
- In the constructivist tradition, individuals
choose between varying identity markers. - The Moreno question offers a measure that
allows individuals to combine their
ethno-territorial (regional) and their civic
state (national) identities. - Other scales ask citizens to distinguish between
up to four levels of identification with
locality, region, nation and Europe. These are
difficult to operationalise. They assume the
voter/citizen has the ability to integrate four
or more dimensions
24What is the Moreno scale?
- The Moreno question measures dual identities
through asking respondents how they combine their
ethno-territorial (regional) and their civic
state (national) identities. The Moreno identity
scale was initially developed as a means of
mapping the revival of ethno-territorial
identities in the union states of Spain and the
United Kingdom. - Logically, this measure only makes sense where
there are overlapping identities. Rather than
withering away, as predicted by modernistic
social science, minority nationalism has emerged
as a powerful force across Europe. There has been
a revival of ethno-territorial identities and a
challenge to the centralist model of the unitary
state
25Multiple identities
- Though civic and ethnic nationalism are often in
conflict, the core of Morenos argument is that
modern states have witnessed the emergence of
multiple identities. - There is evidence that citizens in advanced
liberal democracies seem to reconcile
supranational, state and local identities, which
both majority and minority nationalisms often
tend to polarise in a conflicting manner (McEwen
and Moreno, 2005 22).
26Constructing Identities
- Moreno develops an ideal-type against which to
measure ethno-territorial identities. - Ethno-territorial identities reflect themselves
in sub-state political institutions, distinctive
party systems, language rights movements and
cultural traditions and specific forms of elite
accommodation. - This measure has been used to measure dual
identities in Scotland, Wales, Catalonia, Basque
country, Flanders, Brittany - A. Cole used this scale to measure dual
identities in Wales and Brittany
27Brittany and Wales Strong Identity Regions
- Brittany and Wales are both historic regions with
complex but strong identities. Both Brittany and
Wales possess distinctive institutions and strong
political and/or cultural identities, features
that set them apart from most other regions
within their respective nation-states. The
research design is thus based on the most similar
comparative case study (Ragin, 1997). - These two regions are broadly comparable in terms
of the challenges they face. In historical terms,
both Brittany and Wales correspond to those
regions identified by Rokkan and Urwin (1982), in
which the development of regional consciousness
is a function of economic dependency and the
persistence of a strong cultural identity.
28Brittany and Wales Strong Identity Regions 2
- Brittany and Wales are both located on the far
Western Atlantic seaboard of Europe, on the
geographical margins of traditionally
highly-centralised states. Both regions have
strong cultural, linguistic and political
identities. - Closely-related Celtic languages, Breton and
Welsh, are spoken in both regions, which provide
a direct object of comparison. - Religion has been important in shaping regional
identities. Catholicism in Brittany, one of
Frances most pious regions, for long performed a
critical role in defining acceptable political
and societal choices. Non-conformism in Wales had
at least as strong an influence. - There are many similar characteristics, but one
major difference the overarching state
structures that are more or less permissive
towards territorial asymmetry and expressions of
regional identity. - Research into compound identities of any sort is
rare in France. In the mainstream French
Republican tradition, territorial (especially
regional) or ethnic identities are considered a
threat to a neutral public sphere that can alone
guarantee political and civil rights.
29Comparing Brittany and Wales
- Modern Brittany is a French region with a
difference. Unlike many other French regions, it
can look to its past existence as an independent
political entity, with its own founding myths and
political institutions - Though the symbols of statehood have long since
disappeared, the region retains many distinctive
characteristics. In theory, Brittany possesses at
least some of the key features identified by
Moreno to develop an ethno-territorial
identity a pre-state political existence, an
autonomist Breton political movement, a language
rights movement, strong cultural traditions and
specific forms of elite accommodation. Wales
shares these characteristics - Wales and Brittany therefore provide a robust
case for testing the importance and limitations
of the relationship between dual identities,
institution-building and political and discursive
opportunity structures.
30Contrasting national and EU environments.
- Both regions operate within overarching national
and EU environments. Neither Brittany nor Wales
can escape from the legacy of its past. The
contrasting prospects for Brittany and Wales of
autonomous forms of regional governance today are
to some extent tied into their different
experiences of nation-state building. - The French State building enterprise has,
historically speaking, been remarkably successful
in inculcating deeply rooted beliefs linking the
national territory with social progress. - The UK Union State was far more permissive and
inclined to take into account territorial
differences. The UK was less insistent than
France on linking uniform state structures and
the enjoyment of civil and political rights. - In both states, the degree of autonomy enjoyed by
these distinctive peripheral regions has been
defined by central government, rather than by the
regions themselves.
31Polling Identities
- At the heart of the Moreno method is the
empirical investigation of dual identities in
territories where there are overlapping
loyalties. Brittany and Wales were identified as
potentially comprising such territories and two
polling organisations were commissioned to carry
out parallel surveys in June 2001 - At the macro-level, we investigated the linkage
of identities with institutions, political
parties and cultural and language rights
movements. For contextual purposes, we also
contrast patterns of elite accommodation. - At the micro-level, we formally identify a series
of independent variables, based on territory,
age, social class, education and language,
against which to calibrate dual identities in
Brittany and Wales.
32The Moreno Identity Scale for Brittany
- Do you consider yourself...
- Breton, not French 2
- More Breton than French 15
- Equally Breton and French 57
- More French than Breton 17
- French, not Breton 7
- Dont know 2
33The Moreno Identity Scale for Wales
- Do you consider yourself...
- Welsh, not British 20
- More Welsh than British 17
- Equally Welsh and British 35
- More British than Welsh 22
- British, not Welsh 6
- Dont know 2
34Discussion
- Dual identities are more easily assumed in
Brittany than in Wales. - There is little perceived conflict between being
Breton and being French, while for an important
minority of Welsh people Britishness is perceived
in negative terms. - Brittany manages to combine ethno-territorial,
civic and supranational identities in a mutually
reinforcing manner. Breton and French identities
appear complementary, the median position (As
Breton as French) being the overwhelming
favourite. - On the other hand, our findings explode the myth
that there is only one French identity
three-quarters of the survey declared themselves
to feel at least as Breton as French. - In Wales, in contrast, we observe a much higher
incidence of divided identities. A sense of
Welshness as being essentially opposed to
Britishness is firmly rooted in a sizeable
minority of Welsh people.
35Identities and Institutions
- There is a debate today in Wales on the future of
Devolution. Which one of the following options do
you prefer ? - Abolish the National Assembly for Wales 24
- Retain a National Assembly with limited powers
24 - Create an elected parliament with tax-raising and
legislative powers 38 - An independent Wales 11
- Dont Know 3
36Identity and Institutions cross tabulated
- Those with an exclusive sense of Welsh identity
(17) are more favourable to independence than
any other group (26) - Those with a primary sense of Welsh identity
(17 20, the first two positions, i.e. Welsh
not British, more Welsh than British) are more
favourable to either independence, or a
Parliament with tax-varying and legislative
powers. - The starkly opposed positions in relation to
identity and institutional preferences suggest
that opinion in Wales was divided about
institutional futures. Even those with an
exclusive sense of Welsh identity, however, are
reluctant to espouse the solution of full
independence. - Brittany number of exclusive identity Bretons
too weak to measure meaningfully the link with
political independence
37Comparing Wales and Brittany the role of the
Party system
- Our analysis demonstrates that the party system
and electoral choice are important explanatory
variables differentiating ethno-territorial
constructions in Brittany and Wales. - In Wales, divided identities fed through directly
into the party system, via the presence of an
important nationalist party. - In Brittany, the discursive and political
opportunity structures provides less fertile
terrain for the development of sub-state
nationalism and shared identities are distributed
fairly evenly across existing political
formations.
38Identity and electoral choice
- Amongst those with an exclusive sense of Welsh
identity, preferences were evenly split between
Labour and Plaid Cymru, with the other parties
registering virtually no support. - Those considering themselves as more Welsh than
British also divided their support mainly between
Labour and Plaid Cymru. - While Labour maintained its support in all
identity configurations, support for Plaid Cymru
steeply declined amongst those considering
themselves as equally or more British than Welsh.
- Conversely, the Conservatives were supported by
those with a primary or exclusive sense of
British identity. - From this indicative survey, Labour appeared as
the pivotal party in Wales, able to appeal across
the entire identity spectrum. Plaid Cymru support
is limited to those who identify themselves
primarily as Welsh Conservative support is
confined to those identifying themselves mainly
as British. The Liberal Democrats can also
mobilise across electorates, but from a much
weaker numeric base.