Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 18 – The
development of regionalism, both within countries and among them, as an idea
and political program, Daniil Kotsyubinsky says, has been stunted by its lack
of a distinctive language suitable for its discussion, a situation that has
been compounded by the fact that regionalism is all too often discussed only in
nationalist terms.
The St. Petersburg State University
scholar who has written on regional issues for more than two decades says that
such a language appropriate to regionalism must be created by the adoption of a
“Declaration of the Rights of Regions” that might eventually overshadow other
international accords (liberal.ru/articles/7401).
Such a declaration, Kotsybinsky
suggests, could define key terms such as “region, regional house, regional
civilization, regionization, regional sovereignty, unilateral regional
secession, resource regional secession and a number of others.” But these
definitions would be only the beginning.
“The most important provisions of
the Declaration of the Rights of Regions could become the following:
·
the right on the individual to acquire and preserve a
regional home;
·
the right of the individual to freely choose his
regional identity and membership in this or that regionization;
·
the right of regional civilization to the preservation
of its cultural foundations; and
·
the right of regional civilizations to free and open
cultural dialogue with each other, as ong as that does not threaten the
cultural foundations of each of them.”
“By recognizing that human rights cannot
be realized outside of specific cultural-historical traditions and frameworks,”
Kotsyubinsky continues, “’the Declaration of the Rights of Regions’ would give
humanity a chance for a less conflict-laden model of evolutionary development
free from threats of forcible intervention” either between states or within
them.
What makes Kotsyubinsky’s argument intriguing
is that he links the issue of regional civilizations internationally with
regionalism within countries, something rarely done. Those who argue for the
recognition of the former such as Vladimir Putin often reject the other, and
conversely, those who support regionalism within countries seldom do it at a
more global level.
That does not mean that his ideas are going
to be accepted or implemented by either, but by suggesting that regionalism
must be discussed not in terms of the nationalist paradigm but rather in its
own, Kotsyubinsky has suggested one way out of what is often a fruitless
discussion of regionalisms of both kinds.
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