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2009 | 35 | 29-47

Article title

PEACEFUL AND MUTUAL PARLIAMENTARY DISSOLUTION: DISSOLVED UNIONS IN SWEDEN-NORWAY (1905) AND CZECHOSLOVAKIA (1993) AND THEIR LESSONS FOR EUROPE

Selected contents from this journal

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Multiethnic states in Europe are, in many ways, struggling to govern themselves. Belgium, for example, has had trouble forming a government based, in large measure, on rising electoral support for Flemish parties and Walloon politicians who do not trust them. This describes the political situation in a number of countries and since European states are not likely to go to war over constitutional issues, a peaceful resolution to conflict must be found. Peaceful dissolution, therefore, is an alternative to political deadlock between different groups. It is an elite driven process whereby a state is dissolved after a constitutional crisis becomes intractable and the state is dissolved without popular consultation. The examples of Sweden–Norway in 1905 and the 'Velvet Divorce' of Czechoslovakia serve as case studies for the process of how dissolution occurs. Moreover, these cases also showcase how dissolution is different from other mechanisms of self-determination like decolonization, irredentism and secession.

Discipline

Year

Issue

35

Pages

29-47

Physical description

Document type

ARTICLE

Contributors

  • Glen M. E. Duerr, Kent State University, Departmenrt of Political Science, Ohio, USA

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

CEJSH db identifier
10PLAAAA07182

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.18e44aba-52aa-343c-9f67-c7cd34598174
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