Es mostren els missatges amb l'etiqueta de comentaris LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS. Mostrar tots els missatges
Es mostren els missatges amb l'etiqueta de comentaris LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS. Mostrar tots els missatges

dimecres, 9 de novembre del 2016

ARTICLE MOLT INTERESSANT. CAL LLEGIR-LO I ENTENDRE'L*

Catalan President Artur Mas appeared in court on 15 October in relation to the symbolic referendum on independence from Spain held on 9 November 2014. Zoran Oklopcic** writes that with Mas and his Junts pel Si coalition committed to setting Catalonia on the path toward a declaration of independence following elections in September, the eyes of the international community are on how the Spanish government chooses to respond. He argues that the strategy of the Catalan independence movement now rests on bringing international pressure on to Madrid by highlighting the government’s unresponsiveness to peaceful demands for a referendum.
Until very recently, there was something strange about the way in which Catalan independence had been pursued. While admirable in its peacefulness, to a foreign observer the claims of Catalan sovereigntists nonetheless appeared farcical in their enduring assertions of the ultimate sovereignty of the Catalan people, nonetheless accompanied by their consistent deference to the authority of the constitutional organs of the Spanish state. While the 2013 Declaration of Sovereignty affirms the right of the Catalan people to decide its political future, in autumn 2014, the Catalan Government dutifully submitted to the authority of a Spanish Constitutional Tribunal. Following its judgment, the Catalan authorities relinquished their authorship over the consultative referendum on independence planned for 9 November 2014, allowing it to proceed under a name designed to be less offensive to the Spanish constitutional order: a ‘consultation’.
The ‘consultation’ proceeded informally, without the benefit of the government’s role that would have reliably counted votes or prevented voting fraud. By submitting to the authority of the Spanish constitution, the Catalan Government was willing to diminish the perception of the legitimacy of the expression of the sovereign will of the Catalan people. It was also willing to accept the risk that present enthusiasm for independence might diminish – which seems to have happened – following yet another ‘false alarm’.
Compare this with the way in which the Slovenian and Croatian governments pursued their independence projects in 1990-91. Even before they organised a popular vote, they made the applicability of the federal constitution conditional on its conformity with their legal orders. In doing so, they explicitly rejected the ultimate legal authority of the federal constitutional court. Once they organised a popular vote on sovereignty, they did it only once. When they did, they didn’t call it a ‘consultation’ or ‘plebiscitary election’, but a referendum on independence.
Needless to say, the differences between Spain in 2015, and Yugoslavia in 1991 are so vast that they almost prevent any comparison. Nonetheless, they do draw attention to the half-hearted way in which Catalan sovereigntists have pursued their project so far. Did they really expect a different response from the Spanish state every time when they, in simulating Catalan sovereignty, submitted to Spanish constitutional authority?
Is this oxymoron the result of their naïve belief that the repeated simulations of the former, will end up persuading the Spanish politicians to abandon their commitment to the latter? Or is it, on the other hand, the result of their cynical political calculus; that the simulacrum of Catalan sovereignty would have exhausted Catalans’ enthusiasm for independence, and save Catalan politicians from a full-blown confrontation with the Spanish state? Even the comparatively more radical political programme of Junts pel Si – which explicitly declared its readiness to unilaterally declare independence – has only committed to that after the end of the 18-month long constituent process.
So why are Catalan parties delaying the process if it cannot be expected that Spain will change its mind? Why set ‘constituent’ tasks for yourself if they can both build, as well as corrode the enthusiasm for independence in the months ahead? Without a credible account of the debates in the inner circle of sovereigntist strategists we can only speculate. What seems reasonable to assume, however, is that behind the meandering road-map of Catalan independence there appears to be a twin strategy of provocation and validation, aimed not primarily at the Catalans or the Spanish, but rather at the international audience. By repeatedly asserting the diluted version of their sovereignty, by exploiting the loopholes of the Spanish constitutional framework, Catalan sovereigntists seem to have hoped – and perhaps still do – to provoke the Spanish state to de-legitimise itself in the eyes of the international community.
On the other hand, the second prong of this strategy seeks to dignify the secessionist project. The longest human chain, the tallest human tower, popular consultations (2014), plebiscitary elections (2015): these are not simply the manifestations of the ‘will of the people’, but are rather pieces of political theatre with a specific rhetorical purpose. Against the charges of political manipulation, radicalism, ethnocentric bigotry or economic selfishness, they sought to persuade the relevant audiences within and outside of Spain of the patience, reasonableness, authenticity, resilience and inclusiveness of Catalan aspirations for independence.
Time will tell whether the project of Catalan independence will be successful. What is worth noting is not only its political, but also its wider normative context. While the constitutional documents of Croatians and Slovenians in 1991 proudly invoked their international legal right to self-determination, Catalans have been much more self-aware of the nuances in contemporary international jurisprudence. They know that there is no juridical consensus that would enable them to persuasively speak about their right to external self-determination in 2015.
They also know that their best chance to gain support of those who take international law seriously – irrespective of that law’s fuzziness – is to either establish effective control over Catalonia without violating peremptory norms of international law, or to demonstrate that they have been oppressed systematically by the Spanish state. In provoking Spain by simulating their sovereignty before they declare independence unilaterally, they hope to achieve one or the other.
Equally, the project of Catalan independence occurs in the era of subtle but profound mutations of the idea of liberal-democratic constitutionalism. Unlike Spain, Canada and the United Kingdom were not only willing to tolerate the secessionist aspirations from one of its constitutional units, but have been responsive towards them in a most striking way.
In Canada, the clearly affirmative result in a referendum would have led to ‘good faith’ negotiations toward the secession of Quebec. In the United Kingdom, the same result would have guaranteed the independence of Scotland. This comparative constitutional background of Canada and United Kingdom also sheds a fresh light on the so-called ‘right to decide’. Rather than being seen as the radical democratic antithesis to modern constitutionalism, it is better seen as a way to uncover the ‘scandal’ of the Spanish constitution’s unresponsiveness.
Without the willingness to escalate their resistance further, the success of the project of Catalan independence will depend on the combined response of the Spanish state and the international community. Catalan strategies of simulated, deferred sovereignty seem to assume that Madrid will prove incapable of maintaining proportionality in its political and legal reactions to the escalating disruptions of the Spanish constitutional order in Catalonia. They also seem to assume that the international community will at some point choose to interpret the Spanish unresponsiveness to peaceful Catalan demands as a political scandal that requires a solution that satisfies their substance.
It is hard to say whether these assumptions are correct. But if they are not, Catalan sovereigntists will be forced to contemplate the conclusion which they sought to evade all along: that the evidence of the legitimacy of your project, and the guarantee of its success, lies not in the performance of the dignity of your aspiration, or in the simulation of your sovereignty, but in the ultimate sacrifice of yourself, and others.
*(NOTA: Aparegut a Europpblog, 19.10.2016)
**Zoran Oklopcic – Carleton University is Associate Professor in the Department of Law and Legal Studies at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada.
Les negretes són meves (J.S.).  Les imatges no apareixen en l'original.

dilluns, 28 de juliol del 2014

COMENTARI PUBLICAT

El prestigiós web EUROPP, vinculat a la no menys prestigiosa London School of Economics, m´ha publicat un comentari que vaig escriure en resposta a l'article de dos acadèmics en referència a l'actitud del govern espanyol respecte l'independentisme, i del qual ja em vaig fer ressò, parcial, en un post anterior.

L'article en qüestió reconeixia el fracàs del govern espanyol en la seva estratègia de condemnar la Catalunya independent a l'ostracisme internacional... sobretot entre els propis catalans. Fet aquest que hem de celebrar, naturalment. 

Però també semblava voler suggerir mesures per canviar aquesta estratègia. És això, precisament, el que em va decidir a enviar el comentari que ara han penjat, i que reprodueixo a continuació en la seva integritat.


"This analysis is asking for a Third Way, between statu quo and Independence. And this way does not exist. The Solanistan experiment that was implemented in Serbia-Montenegro to avoid the Independence of Montenegro was a failure.

The very fact is that Spaniards do not consider Catalonia as a nation, that is, as a political subject. They consider Catalonia only as an Autonomous Community, a subordinate body to Spanish Central Powers. They reduce all to debate to a territorial-administrative-legal management affair.

On the contrary, a growing number of Catalans, see themselves as a nation, a people in the sense of the United Nations definition, and act politically accordingly. They are fed up with the supremacist policies from Madrid in areas such as language, fiscal affairs, business, infrastructures, and so on, and think that the right moment is arrived for Independence.
The PP-PSOE alternative means a progressive minorisation of the Catalan identity and prosperity, doomed to become a region of low skilled workers in tourism, as a monoactivity, in the same way as the Catalan identity has become in France: a folkloric, patois expression for tourists.
New political parties, such UPyD, are even worst, since favours the suppression of Catalan Autonomy. In the case of the new kid in the block, that is, ¨Podemos¨, it is not good news the fact that its popularity comes from a TV channel that belongs to a multimedia group totally opposed to Catalonia´s right to decide.
To conclude, Catalans are committed to vote, and Spain rulers and politicians and media outlets do not want this to happen. The key element, in this scenario, is that Catalans will keep its word until the end, and if the case arrive, if Spanish Government will send its Guardia Civil and Police units to confiscate thousands of two euros worth polling boxes spread in the territory. That, for sure, will be a good present for photojournalists, audiovisual agencies, and also for twitters, instagramers users."

dissabte, 26 de juliol del 2014

GRAN REFLEXIÓ, ANEM GUANYANT!

"One of the pillars of the Spanish Government’s campaign against Catalan secessionism is the international ostracism a Catalan state might face following independence. The Spanish Foreign Minister, José Manuel García Margallo, argued that an independent Catalonia would be ‘damned to wander outer space and would be excluded from the European Union for ever and ever’. The Interior Minister, Jorge Fernández Díaz, further claimed that political independence meant being outside ‘all EU treaties as well as NATO’ and that Catalonia would be a fertile soil for ‘international terrorism and organised crime’.

But such threats about international isolation will not be a game-changer. In a recent study funded by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation, we confronted 1,200 Catalan voters with various scenarios regarding the EU membership of an independent Catalonia. Even when confronted with a scenario of ‘EU exclusion’ more than 55 per cent of Catalans opted for independence (without this treatment more than 60 per cent of Catalans voted for secession). The Spanish executive should be especially concerned about the fact that even among Catalans who feel both Spanish and Catalan, and who tend to be less nationalist, more than 70 per cent intended to vote in favor of independence under these circumstances. Amongst those whose identity was ‘only Catalan’ support for independence was almost 100 per cent.

Our findings seem to suggest that for many Catalans even the threat of EU exclusion is not credible or strong enough to substantially change their preferences. Support for secessionism remains largely stable in all identity groups despite the ‘positive’ and ‘negative’ scenarios concerning EU membership. Those with single identities (‘only Catalan’, ‘only Spanish’) are less likely to change their preferences for secession than those with dual identities (‘more Catalan than Spanish’, ‘as Catalan as Spanish’, ‘more Spanish than Catalan’). The findings therefore confirm the idea that self-identification and support for secession are highly correlated and that threats are not very effective." (ARTICLE COMPLERT)