International Journal of Conflict and Violence (Dec 2010)

Ethnicised Politics: Patterns of Interpretation of Rwandans and Burundians

  • Carla Schraml

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
pp. 257 – 268

Abstract

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<div>Following Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann (1991) this study focuses on taken-for-granted notions, i.e. knowledge (defining ethnicised politics asexclusion</div><div>interpreted with reference to ethnic categories). This represents a departure from the conventional academic discussion of ethnicised politics, which focuses</div><div>on exclusion inherent to the structures of political systems when seeking to explain violent conflict aligned along ethnic cleavages. The study compares two</div><div>neighbouring countries, Rwanda and Burundi, where different institutional models have been introduced to overcome ethnicised politics following comparable</div><div>episodes of ethnic violence. Whereas the Rwandan system avoids political representation based on ethnic categories, the Burundian system prescribes ethnic</div><div>quotas. Semi-standardised interviews with twenty-two Rwandans and twenty Burundians conducted between September 2007 and May 2008 investigated ethnicised</div><div>politics as patterns of interpretation (i.e. knowledge). The study found that notwithstanding the different political institutional systems in Rwanda and</div><div>Burundi (both aiming to overcome ethnicised politics), exclusion in both systems is interpreted with reference to ethnic categories, i.e. politics are ethnicised</div><div>in both countries. This result points to the importance of conceiving ethnicised politics as historically produced knowledge, i.e. patterns of interpretation.</div>

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