Mobilization, Flexibility of Identity, and Ethnic Cleavage
Authored by Kazuya Yamamoto
Date Published: 2015
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/4147/releases/1.0.0/
Abstract
In modern states, mobilization policy has been used to awaken people to
new ideas such as national identity, industrial capitalism, and civic
society. However, it has long been debated whether mobilization in new
countries or in countries under reconstruction creates an integrated
identity or results in fragmentation of various ethnic groups. Although
the idea that identity is not immutable but malleable is now widely
accepted in political science, sociology, and other social sciences, the
degree to which identity can be reconstructed once it has been mobilized
remains unclear. This study employs an agent-based model to address
questions regarding the relationship between governments' mobilization
and the integration of identity in countries. The analysis suggests that
more rapid mobilization by governments stabilizes a greater ethnic
cleavage. This result is found to be robust by changing parameters and
by modifying the specifications of the model. In addition, the analysis
presents two other implications. The first is that a spiraling
fragmentation of identity might occur if governments fail to accommodate
people. The second is that in an age of advanced communication, governments need more assimilative power than before in order to secure
integration. The analysis suggests that future research about identity
formation in countries should consider the rigidity as well as the
flexibility of identity.
Tags
polarization
Dissemination
globalization
Adaptive culture model
Political-development
Information feedback
Nation
Assimilation
Genocide