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INTERVIEWS: Multiculturism as a Failed Cure
By John Crace
One country that tried to heal divisions only made them deeper, as Hoover senior fellow Paul Sniderman discovered. By John Crace.
The best ideas often have the most unpromising beginnings. Toward
the end of the 1990s, at a conference in Italy, Paul Sniderman had just
finished presenting his findings on immigrant minorities from East
Europe and Africa when a delegate stood up to ask him a question. “He
was only about four sentences in when I realized there was a huge gap
in my research and that I didn’t have a clue what the answer was,” he
says.
The question that left him speechless was this: if, as Sniderman argued,
people didn’t distinguish between minorities in their prejudices—those who
were systematically hostile to one were likely to be systematically hostile to
another—how did he reconcile this with the fact that there were clearly
hierarchies of minorities?
Later that afternoon, at a different seminar, the same person asked him
another question that was almost as tricky. Again, Sniderman had no hiding
place. “I couldn’t escape the fact that I had clearly made a big mistake,”
he says. Many academics might have adopted a policy of damage limitation,
before sloping off to lick their wounds in private. Sniderman did
something rather different. He invited his conference nemesis—a Dutchman
named Louk Hagendoorn—to collaborate on a research project to
find out the answers he didn’t have.
This turned out to be the best decision Sniderman ever made. Sniderman,
a senior Hoover fellow and Stanford political-science professor, and
Hagendoorn embarked on a study of Muslim minorities in the Netherlands.
“We were very lucky,” he says, “because we began our research before anyone
was aware there was a problem, before September 11, and well before
the murders of the Dutch filmmaker Theo Van Gogh and the gay right-wing
politician Pim Fortuyn. This meant there was a purity to our work that
wouldn’t have been there if we had been merely reacting to events. We were
getting a snapshot of a society before it could be distorted by outside events.”
According to their research—just published in a book, When Ways of Life
Collide (Princeton University Press)—deep divisions between locals and
Muslim immigrants existed much earlier than anyone had previously suspected
in the tolerant, democratic Netherlands.
“There was this feeling,” Sniderman says, “that because the Dutch government
was so openly committed to pursuing a policy of multiculturalism,
and because there had been no trouble between Muslims and the
Dutch, then that policy must be working.
“Yet we discovered something quite different. While any society will
always have its fair share of bigots, we also found that governmental multiculturalism
made the problem worse. By arguing that all groups in society
should be allowed to live according to their own beliefs and customs,
they were encouraging people to see themselves as different from one
another. And not just a little bit different, but fundamentally different. So
it fostered a them-and-us attitude to politics.”
At one level, this is all very obvious. The more value you attach to questions
of identity, the more reaction you are likely to get, with the result that
people who don’t normally care very much about ideas of national identity
can be provoked into extreme attitudes. But there are ironies and nuances at
work. For one thing, Dutch policies of multiculturalism had their origins in
racism rather than liberalism. The idea that minorities should maintain their
traditions stemmed from the belief that their presence would be only temporary
and that sooner or later they would be going “back home.” So the idea
that multiculturalism might backfire shouldn’t be quite as shocking as it seems.
But what also emerges from this study is the thinness of the line between
difference and prejudice. “We found that views typically held by otherwise tolerant Dutch people—that Muslims treated women badly and were too
authoritarian with their children—were counterbalanced by Muslim attitudes
towards the Dutch,” says Sniderman. “Muslims believed the Dutch
were disrespectful towards women and failed to discipline their children
properly. So this wasn’t about prejudices held by religious fanatics on both
sides; it was a genuine conflict of values between two communities. It was
the focus on these differences, through the pursuit of multiculturalism, that
tipped the balance towards prejudice in some cases.”
Sniderman is too cautious to generalize from his data, but he will concede
there are parallels that can reasonably be made between Britain and
the Netherlands, particularly in regard to faith schools. “The Dutch always
pursued a segregated education policy of different schools for Protestants
and Catholics,” he says, “and it seemed obvious for them to apply the same
principles for Muslims.
“Yet the evidence proves this hasn’t worked. The biggest predictor of integration
and social mobility in the Netherlands is the ability to speak Dutch,
and kids at Muslim schools are not learning the language as well as students
in other schools. The result is that second-generation Muslim immigrants
are actually becoming worse off than their parents, a situation that can only
cause more problems. And if the British government continues to promote
faith schools, it could well find itself in a similar predicament.”
Yet Sniderman does not reckon that trying to enforce a national British
identity is the answer, as it also keeps the focus firmly on similarity and differences.
So what is the solution? “Ah,” he says carefully, “I’m in the knowledge
business, not the wisdom business. So I’m not really qualified in this.
“But it doesn’t mean that I haven’t thought about it, and what I have
come up with is this: Western governments should learn to chill out a little
more. They should have more belief in the strength of liberal democracies.
They’re a great deal less fragile than they imagine. They should legislate
less for how they want people to feel, and more on the things that really
matter, such as educational opportunity.”
This essay appeared in the Guardian (U.K.) on July 3, 2007. © Guardian News & Media Ltd.
Available from the Hoover Press is Anti-Americanism in Europe: A Cultural Problem, by Russell
A. Berman. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit www.hooverpress.org.
John Crace writes for the Guardian (U.K.).
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