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Lebanon Confronts Partition Fears: Has Consociationalism Benefitted Minorities?

Authors

BARROSO CORTÉS, FRANCISCO SALVADOR, Kechichian, Joseph A.

External publication

Si

Means

Contemp. Rev. Middle East

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

Publication date

01/03/2018

ISI

000503081500002

Abstract

Lebanese consociationalism has been under stress due to serious internal and external pressures. Though Lebanese regional and global leaders continue to pay lip service to Lebanon's unity and uphold putative commitments to its sovereignty and territorial integrity, partition to resolve internal crises remains on the table. After a long and still unsettled civil war, absolute internal discord among citizens and, increasingly, the uprisings throughout the region, partition was and is once again openly discussed by many even if most camouflage it under the decentralization, federalism, or con-federalism schemes. The article underlines the inherent vulnerabilities of the Lebanese state and analyzes its deep fault lines raising a serious question about the future integrity of Lebanon.

Keywords

Lebanon; consociationalism; minorities; Hizballah; constitutional crisis; partition

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