Etikk i Praksis: Nordic Journal of Applied Ethics (Nov 2013)

Multiculturalism and legal autonomy for cultural minorities

  • Morten Ebbe Juul Nielsen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5324/eip.v7i2.1798
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2

Abstract

Read online

Does multiculturalism imply that certain cultural minorities – nomos groups, whose cultural conceptions extend in important ways into views about the law – should have forms of legal autonomy that go beyond normal multicultural accommodations such as exemptions and special protection? In other words: should we allow «minority jurisdictions» for multicultural reasons and give certain minorities powers of legislation and adjudication on certain issues? The paper sketches how one might arrive at such a conclusion given some standard multicultural reasoning, and then proceeds by examining eight key rejoinders to such a proposal. None of these rejoinders provide by themselves knockdown arguments against extending multicultural rights to forms of legal autonomy, but together they do provide a basis for some skepticism about the cogency and desirability of at least more ambitious forms of legal autonomy for cultural minorities within a liberal framework.

Keywords