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Comparative Relevance of the Ethiopian Federal System to other African Polities of the Horn: First Thoughts on the Possibility of “Exporting” Multi-ethnic Federalism


Tsegaye Regass

Abstract

Ethiopia has been experimenting with federalism for several y
ears now. Its accent on
ethno
-
linguistic criteria for state formation, its constitutional recognition of the right
to secession, the unusual mode of constitutional adjudication through the House of
Federation (a body that is analogous to an upper house of
a bicameral legislature),
the de facto asymmetry that persists in spite of the de jure symmetry, the lack of
explicit textual recognition of federal supremacy and the consequent
parallelism/dualism noted in federal practice, among other things, have attrac
ted
attention both in academic and non
-
academic circles. This article seeks to reflect upon
whether the Ethiopian federal experiment can offer some lessons to other countries of
the Horn of Africa who feel the similar burden of diversity, conflict, and ins
ecurity. In
other words, it inquires into the “exportability” of the Ethiopian brand of federalism.
In so doing, it first seeks to descriptively situate federalism in Ethiopia’s past and
present. Then it weighs the (ir)relevance of the Ethiopian federal ex
periment to the
countries in the sub
-
region by looking into the significance of multi
-
ethnic federalism
for internal peace and stability, for entrenchment of ethno
-
cultural justice and for
governance of diversity, and for the prospect of regional integrati
on. In the quest for a
potential ‘market’ to export to, this piece reflects on the factors that facilitate the
migration of law (e.g. success at home, prestige abroad, and the psychology of the
countries of the sub
-
region which inevitably is informed by a
history of chequered
relations, etc). In this way, it seeks to examine the comparative relevance of the
Ethiopian federal experiment to other countries with a common set of ailments to deal
with.

Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2709-5827
print ISSN: 2306-224X