Talk:Ethnocracy
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Redirect?
"Ethnic democracy" redirects to this page and it really shouldn't they are 2 separate theories of government. Sammy Smooha came up with the "ethnic democracy" concept to reconcile the differences between an ethnocracy and democracy for Israel. Ethnocracy replaces the demos (everyone) in democracy with ethnos (an ethnic group) meaning that it is no longer a democracy. Although i don't entirely subscribe to his view, Smooha argues that although Israel is a Jewish state, run by and for the Jewish people, it has enough democratic characteristics (independent Judiciary, periodic elections etc.) for it to still be classed as a form of democracy rather than an ethnocracy or apartheid regime. There is obviously much debate about which Israel actually is, but the fact of the matter is that they are not the same type of system. - B Cook 87.194.21.65 19:40, 28 May 2007 (UTC)
- I entirely agree. This article originally stated that "ethnocracy" and "ethnic democracy" was the same thing. I attempted to clean up this article, but obviously we need a separate article. Martintg 01:05, 29 May 2007 (UTC)
- Split into Ethnic democracy completed Martintg 01:21, 29 May 2007 (UTC)
Israel?
Shouldn't Israel be mentioned as well ? A clear example of an ethnocracy ! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 62.194.104.78 (talk • contribs) 21:33, 2 September 2006
Actually Israel is a very weak example considering the fact that Arabs hold portfolios in the government, serve in the knesset, vote and are deputy speakers in the partliament.
I think the section on Israel should be removed. Citizens of Israel have equal voting rights, and therefore Israel does not fit the definition of "ethnocracy". Just because some professor wrote a book saying otherwise doesn't justify a whole section of the article. 6SJ7 (talk) 16:38, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- That's your opinion. The section is well sourced and attributed. —Ashley Y 10:03, 8 April 2008 (UTC)
Even though 20% of Israeli population is Arabic citizen, there is only 10% of Arab inside Knesset, due to democratic votes. Anyway, it is not ethnocracy. It is democracy. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 118.96.144.70 (talk) 16:56, 20 February 2010 (UTC)
The elephant in the room here being that Israel employs ethno/religious criteria to immigration to manipulate the demographic of the state to begin with, using of the Law of Return (encouraging Jewish immigration) whilst simultaneously using the Absentee Law (to expropriate Arab property) and ensuring Palestinian refugees to not return to Israel "proper". It's really a case of "do you really think it'd be that obvious?". Israeli law rarely explicitly states a ethnocratic desire, but the way laws are always used to reinforce the "Israel is a Jewish state" mantra. And that's before we even get on to the issue of the fact that Arabs in the occupied territories have no democratic representation at all to the Knesset whilst the Jewish settlements in the OT full complete and full political rights. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.174.223.65 (talk) 08:11, 6 July 2010 (UTC)
- Many countries, including Japan, Germany, and Finland have laws which are designed to maintain the national character of the state, including favorable immigration laws for specific ethnicities. This is quite common, and Israel is not unique in this respect at all. See Right of Return. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.244.215.226 (talk) 22:29, 11 October 2010 (UTC)
The piece on Israel is very poorly-written and biased. Firstly, the reference to 'Native Palestinian [sic]', which is a politically-loaded term that fails to take into account the substantial population of Jews in Palestine before mass Aliyah in the 19th century. Secondly, the pledge of allegiance has yet to be passed into law, and is by no means guaranteed to get passed into law. Thirdly, Israel has been officially a 'Jewish and democratic state' according to basic law for about as long as it has existed, and surely the piece should mention this and not simply the pledge? Finally, opposing points of view have obviously not been taken into account. I do support mentioning Israel in this article due to perceptions of Israel as an 'apartheid state', but absolutely not in this way.92.232.174.87 (talk) 16:15, 13 October 2010 (UTC)
- Not only should Israel be mentioned under the list of current ethnocracies, but the section needs to be expanded, and also, the ridiculous Zionist propaganda arguing that it represents a "middle ground" between an ethnocracy and liberal democracy should be removed. Israel has been found to be an apartheid state by reputable international human rights organisations such as Amnesty International (https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/campaigns/2022/02/israels-system-of-apartheid/) and Human Rights Watch (https://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/media_2021/04/israel_palestine0421_web_0.pdf).
- Israel is therefore more accurately described as an extreme example of an ethnocracy.
- For the same reason, Israel should be removed from the related article https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnic_democracy
- MathewMunro (talk) 17:02, 8 April 2023 (UTC)
Syria
Don't forget the Alawite-controlled government of Syria which places fellow Alawites in key positions of power. Though nominally belonging to a quasi-Islamic religious sect, Alawites form a dominant minority who perceive themselves as a distinct ethnic group with a culture of their own. Since they do not impose their religious views on the larger society and instead uphold secular ideals, it would be improper to call Syria a "theocracy." I propose including Syria among other ethnocracies. The dominant Alawite role in the government and military has been a central issue in the ongoing Syrian Civil War. — Preceding unsigned comment added by BDS2006 (talk • contribs) 19:10, 28 March 2016 (UTC)
- outdated 2600:480A:4A51:9300:241A:EEDA:D6B0:A707 (talk) 16:24, 17 April 2025 (UTC)
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You also miss a Mastodon in the room, and the elephant sits over him....Israel is a democracy built, aside all merits and efforts, in a "easy way"; not educating all people who live in a place to cohabit without racism and violence but, uhmmmmmm.......denying citizenship to the ones we don't like. That is, sending away an undesirable numerical majority of natives denying its natural citizenship rights in that land, according to rules applied anywhere else in post-colonial time. Eg, if you are born in India, be it in Tamil Nadu o Uttar Pradesh, under British rule, when India is independent you have citizenship and voting rights.
In Israel instead this is only given to a "controllable" minority of Arabs, which still seem a bit less privileged than the so engineered Jewish majority. Even if there is this minority of accepted Arabs that make you happy and cheerful, the mastodon remains: a large, PREDOMINANT chunk of the "natural" regional demos was kicked out for political reasons by a minority that made its own state and its own rules. Another large chunk (Palestinians in Gaza an West Bank) is locked out without citizenship and with limited freedoms. This is in contrast with a democracy based on "western" standards, especially because no viable, human-rights compliant alternative (eg, two states - see Slovakia and Czech Republic) was seriosly pursued. Israel is a democracy built and preserved with a substantial, habitual violation of contemporary citizenship attribution criteria and of human rights general charters. Denying it is fiction.
The current stability of the current Israeli democracy relies on the expulsion of a vast majority of former Arabic, non-Jewish inhabitants (as many as the current jewish population maybe more), as much as on the prohibition of their return. Ok, for the people who belong to it, it is a democracy; but the ethnic, numeric and social aspects of the DEMOS that had full international and customary rights to inhabit that land has been VIOLENTLY altered in preparation and during the cours of this democratic system. We all know that the Palestinians had a valid case to be citizens after the British independence if a single state was to be, and they would clearly, if allowed to vote, alter deeply the current nature of Israel (its democracy system itself included). Can you be proud of a democracy that excluded from the game most of the natives, putting it in the same league of SweDEN OR Switzerland (exact opposite) without being at least a bit in bad faith?
Enough many historians, I bet, agree it is a democracy made with XIX century methods, crafted kicking out / keeping under control the "wrong people", to make room to the current Israeli system of "right guys", which everyone knows / admits will always be "protected" from risks of Arab demgraphic takeover by propor political choices that preserve the desired ethnic balance (if you need quotations we will find some, but new settlements and Jerusalem construction strategy go in this direction)....
- Since most other historic cases slaughtered all the natives, and Israel merely expelled them (and clearly did a bad job of it, considering 20% of people in Israel-proper are Arabs), sure, I'm proud. Also worth mentioning that the majority of them were expelled in a defensive war initiated by the other side, and there is good reason to believe no expulsions would have happened if not for the context of war, so really, I think the idea that the consequences of war rest with the aggressor is not entirely far-fetched.
- Anyway, none of this rhetoric is a good argument for claiming that the state of Israel, the one that actually exists -- not the one that could have been -- is an ethnocracy. 64.244.215.226 (talk) 22:50, 11 October 2010 (UTC)