Title of article :
Nationalism as a Deterrent to Peace and Interethnic Democracy: The Failure of Nationalist Leadership from the Hague Talks to the Cyprus Referendum
Author/Authors :
HARRY ANASTASIOU، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Supported by the EU and the international community, the extraordinary
effort of the UN to mediate a settlement of the Cyprus problem
before the integration of Cyprus into the EU ended in failure. The two
historical highlights that marked the failure of the peace process were
the top level talks at The Hague in March 2003 and the Cyprus referendum
in April 2004. The purpose of this paper is to explore the role
that the Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot leadership played in derailing
the peace effort during these two defining moments in the evolution
of the Cyprus problem. The analysis focuses on the polarizing
ethno-centric nationalism of the then Turkish Cypriot and Greek Cypriot
leaders. But it does so by contrasting the respective nationalism of
the leaders to the Europeanizing and peace-enhancing trends that were
emerging in Cypriot civil society and Greco-Turkish relations during the
crucial period leading to the Hague talks and the Cyprus referendum.
From this perspective, the role of the Cypriot leaders during the negotiation
process is assessed against the backdrop of Turkey’s changed
policy on Cyprus and the deepening interethnic rapprochement between
the Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot communities, especially
following the lifting of restriction to free movement across the green line
in April 2003. The investigation attempts to explore how the stubborn
sustenance and strategic reactivation of the legacy of adversarial nationalism,
as well as the perpetuation of the mono-ethnic concept of
statehood by the Cypriot leaders rendered them practically unwilling
and ideologically incapable of recognizing and seizing the greatest historical
opportunity for peace in Cyprus in half a century
Keywords :
Nationalism , interethnic democracy , ethno-centric , CONFLICT , peace , Rapprochement , settlement , Cyprus problem
Journal title :
International Studies Perspectives
Journal title :
International Studies Perspectives