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The article studies how power-sharing institutions can foster the depoliticization of ethnicity after ethnic conflicts. Building on a constructivist and neo-institutionalist theoretical framework, it argues that the depoliticization of ethnicity can be fostered by power-sharing systems combining: (1) guarantees for the ethnic representativeness of political institutions and the security of all ethnic categories, and (2) institutional mechanisms that incentivize the reorientation of political alliances on a multi-ethnic basis. The case of Burundi provides a plausibility probe for the argument. The article suggests the existence of an ‘associational’ model of power-sharing, where ethnic conflict is transformed by the depoliticization of ethnicity.

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This page is a summary of: The Politics of Association: Power-Sharing and the Depoliticization of Ethnicity in Post-War Burundi, Ethnopolitics, September 2018, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/17449057.2018.1519933.
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