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Pillarisation

Pillarisation (from the Dutch: verzuiling) is the vertical separation of citizens into groups by religion and associated political beliefs. These societies were (and in some areas, still are) divided into two or more groups known as pillars (Dutch: zuilen). The best-known examples of this have historically occurred in the Netherlands and Belgium.

Each pillar may have its own social institutions and social organizations. These may include its own newspapers, broadcasting organisations, political parties, trade unions, farmers' associations, banks, stores, schools, hospitals, universities, scouting organisations and sports clubs. Such segregation means that many people have little or no personal contact with members of other pillars.

Netherlands edit

The Netherlands had at least three pillars, namely Protestant, Catholic and social-democratic. Pillarisation was originally initiated by Abraham Kuyper and his Christian Democratic and neo-Calvinist (gereformeerd) Anti-Revolutionary Party (ARP) in the late 19th century; it was part of its philosophy of sphere sovereignty.[1][failed verification]

The Catholic pillar had the highest degree of organisation because Catholic clergy promoted the organisation of Catholics in confessional institutions. Yet the conservative Protestant pillar and the Socialist pillar, which mainly consisted of industrial workers, were nearly as tightly knit.[2] The Protestant (hervormd) Christian Historical Union (CHU) (formed in 1908) did not organise a pillar of its own but linked to the Protestant pillar shaped by the ARP.

People who were not associated with one of these pillars, mainly middle- and upper-class latitudinarian Protestants and atheists, arguably set up their own pillar: the liberal or "general" pillar. Ties between general organisations were much weaker than within the other three pillars. Liberals rejected the voluntary segregation of the society, and denied the existence of a "liberal pillar".[2] The political parties usually associated with this group were the Free-minded Democratic League (VDB) and Liberal State Party (LSP). Communists, Humanists, and ultra-orthodox Protestant fundamentalists also set up similar organisations; however, such groups were much smaller.

The development of pillarisation in the Netherlands was favoured by the emancipation of working and lower-middle classes on the one hand, and the execution of elite control on the other hand. The emancipation of the working class led to the establishment of socialist parties, trade unions, media, cooperative shops and collectively organised leisure activities. This "full care" of the socialist movement for its members existed similarly in other European countries. The emancipation of the conservative and often strongly religious lower-middle class fostered the emergence of the Protestant pillar. While the Dutch bourgeoisie was rather liberal and adhered to "enlightened" Protestantism, a large part of the lower-middle class embraced a more orthodox Calvinist theology, as taught by preacher and politician Abraham Kuyper.[2]

In 1866 Kuyper founded the gereformeerd ("reformed") current of Protestantism; it was both more conservative and more popular with ordinary people than the established Protestant churches in the Netherlands. Kuyper's worldview asserted the principle of "sphere sovereignty", rejecting both ecclesiasticism (rule of the Church over all parts of the society) and statist secularism (rule of the state over all parts of the society). He argued that both had their own spheres in which the other was not to interfere. In 1879 he founded the Anti-Revolutionary Party as the political wing of his religious movement and core of the Protestant pillar.

At the same time, new and old elites tried to maintain their control over the newly emancipated social groups. For instance, the Catholic clergy set up confessional unions to prevent Catholic workers from joining socialist unions. One reason behind the formation of Christian parties was to counter the feared rise of left-wing mass parties.[2]

Institutions by pillar edit

The following table shows the most important institutions by pillar:

  Protestant Catholic Socialist Liberal
Political party before 1945
  • AB (1904–1926)
  • RKSP (1926–1945)
SDAP (from 1894)
Political parties after 1945
  • KVP (until 1977)
  • CDA (from 1977; ecumenical)
PvdA (from 1945)
Broadcasting organisation
Unions
Employers PCW NKW none VNO
Newspapers
De Tijd (1845–1974)
De Volkskrant (since 1919)
Schools "School with bible" (Protestant oriented school), Protestant Education Roman Catholic School Free Schools, Public Schools Public Schools
Universities
Hospitals Green/Orange Cross White/Yellow Cross Green Cross
Sport clubs
  • NCSU
  • NSA
  • TvA
  • NKS
  • NSA
  • NASB
  • NRS
  • NCS
  • NSA
NOC*NSF
Recreation (examples) Saturday football, weekend rugby union Sunday football Dancing schools, Sunday football, korfball Folk dancing, weekend rugby union, field hockey, weekend football

Depillarisation edit

After World War II (during which even the Dutch resistance was pillarised) liberals and socialists, but also Protestants and Catholics, began to doubt the pillarised system. They founded a unity movement, the People's Movement Nederlandse Volksbeweging. Progressives of all pillars (including the Catholic resistance movement Christofoor) were united in the aim to renew the political system (doorbraak, "breakthrough"). But pillarisation was ingrained in Dutch society, and could not be defeated that easily. In order to force this breakthrough, the socialist Social Democratic Workers' Party, the left-liberal VDB and the Christian-socialist CDU united to form the PvdA, a progressive party, which was open to all people. The new party did not, however, gain enough support under Catholics or Reformed, and the PvdA became encapsulated in the socialist pillar.

Television broadcasting was also pillarised, but everyone watched the same broadcasts nonetheless, since initially only one channel was available in the Netherlands in the 1950s. During the 1960s the pillars largely broke down, particularly under political criticism from D66 and the group Nieuw Links [nl] (New Left) in PvdA. Because of this and of increased mobility, many people could see that people from the other pillars were not that different from themselves. Increased wealth and education made people independent of many of the pillarised institutions, and young people did not want to be associated with these organisations anymore.

In 1973, two main Protestant parties, ARP and CHU, merged with the Catholic KVP to form the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA). They first participated in the 1977 general elections. In 1976, the Catholic trade union Nederlands Katholiek Vakverbond [nl] (NKV) started to cooperate with the trade union of the Socialist pillar (NVV), to merge into the Federatie Nederlandse Vakbeweging (FNV) in 1982.

The pillarisation of society has not fully disappeared, and many remnants can still be seen in the 21st century: public television, for instance, is still divided among several organisations, instead of being one organisation. The Netherlands has both public and religious schools, a divide which is also inherited from pillarisation. Moreover, some communities continue to behave as small "pillars" as of 2014, although rather than forming the structure of society (a pillar), this currently moves them outside the mainstream of society. Members of the Reformed Churches (liberated) have their own (primary and secondary) schools, their own national newspaper, and some other organisations, such as a labour union. Members of several pietist Reformed Churches have also founded their own schools, newspaper and political party. Increasingly, Muslim immigrants in the Netherlands are also using the legal possibilities created for the pillarised structure of society, by setting up their own schools.

Belgium edit

Apart from having no Protestant pillar, pillarisation in Belgium was very similar to that in Netherlands. There was also no "general" pillar, but a politically well-organised liberal pillar. In 1911, the British sociologist Seebohm Rowntree noted that in Belgium:

There is extraordinarily little social intercourse between Catholics and Liberals, and practically none between Catholics and Socialists. Politics enter into almost every phase of social activity and philanthropic effort, and it is the exception rather than the rule for persons holding different political opinions to co-operate in any other matter. Thus in one town there will be a Catholic, a Liberal and a Socialist trade union, a Catholic, a Liberal and a Socialist thrift society, each catering for similar people, but each confining its attentions to members of its own political party. The separation extends to cafes, gymnasia, choral, temperance, and literary societies; indeed it cuts through life![3]

In both Flanders and Wallonia, societies were pillarised between Catholic and Liberal political denominations which were subsequently joined by a Socialist pillar. Even though the liberals were stronger in Belgium (particularly in Brussels) than in the Netherlands, they were still relatively weak, owing to their rather small, bourgeois support: liberal trade unions were very small. De Tijd, a financial daily, is the newspaper aligned with the liberals, as its readership consists mainly of liberal supporters. However, a Flemish newspaper with historical liberal roots, Het Laatste Nieuws, also exists.[citation needed]

Denominational (many Catholic and a few Jewish) schools receive some public money, although not parity of funding as in the Netherlands, so that tuition is almost completely free. Belgian universities charge more or less the same, relatively low, tuition fees.

As a consequence of the language struggle in the latter half of the twentieth century, the pillars split over the language issue, which became the most significant divisive factor in the nation. Now every language group has three pillars of its own. The pillar system remained to be the primordial societal dividing force much longer than it was in the Netherlands. Only near the end of the Cold War did it begin to lose importance, at least at the individual level, and to this day it continues to influence Belgian society. For example, even the 1999–2003 "Rainbow Coalition" of Guy Verhofstadt was often rendered with the terms of pillarisation. The political movements that appeared in the late 20th century (such as Vlaams Blok, now Vlaams Belang; Groen!; and N-VA) did not attempt to build pillars.

Pillarisation was visible even in everyday social organisations such as musical ensembles, sport clubs, recreational facilities, etc. Weakened in the current situation, many major social organisations (trade unions, cooperatives, etc.) still strictly follow the lines of pillars though.

Institutions by pillar with their ethnic divisions edit

The following table is limited to the most important institutions and it shows the current division of everyone by the three ethnic groups.

  Flemish Catholic Walloon Catholic German Catholic Flemish Socialist Walloon Socialist German Socialist Flemish Liberal Walloon Liberal German Liberal
Political parties before 1945 Catholic Party (until 1936)
Catholic Bloc (since 1936)
Belgian Labour Party (BWP/POB) Liberal Party
Catholic Flemish People's Party (since 1936) Social Catholic Party (since 1936)
Political parties between 1945 and 1970 Christian Social Party (CVP/PSC) Belgian Socialist Party (BSP/PSB)
Political parties after 1970

minor
  • VCP (2007–2014)
  • NCD (2012)

minor
  • MCC (since 1998)
  • CDF (2002–2012)
CSP
minor
PS SP
  • PRL (since 2002 part of MR)
  • MR (since 2002)
PFF
Trade unions Confederation of Christian Trade Unions (ACV/CSC) General Federation of Belgian Labour (ABVV/FGTB) General Confederation of Liberal Trade Unions of Belgium (ACLVB/CGSLB)
Boerenbond
Health insurance Christelijke Mutualiteit Mutualité chrétienne Christliche Krankenkasse Socialistische Mutualiteit Mutualité socialiste Sozialistische Krankenkasse Liberale Mutualiteit Mutualité Libérale Freie Krankenkasse
Hospitals White/Yellow Cross Christian Fund Christian Fund (Center for) Homecare Socialist Fund Socialist Fund Solidarity for the Family Liberal Fund Liberal Fund
Aid agencies Caritas Vlaanderen Caritas en Belgique francophone et germanophone Caritas en Belgique Francophone-Deutschsprachiges Belgien FOS-Socialistische Solidariteit Solidarité Socialiste-FCD Solidariteit-FCD none none none
Newspapers La Libre Belgique Grenz-Echo
  • Vooruit [nl] (until 1978)
  • Volksgazet [nl] (until 1978)
  • De Morgen (since 1978)
none none Le Soir none
Cultural associations Davidsfonds none none Vermeylenfonds none none Willemsfonds none none
Schools Flemish Secretariat for Catholic Education (Catholic Schools), Flemish Association of Catholic Colleges Catholic schools Public schools Public schools Public schools Public schools, non-denominational private schools Public schools, non-denominational private schools Public schools, non-denominational private schools
Major universities Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Université catholique de Louvain none Ghent University University of Liège none Vrije Universiteit Brussel Université libre de Bruxelles none
Other universities none Trans-Universiteit Limburg Faculté Universitaire des Sciences Agronomiques de Gembloux none Erasmus Hogeschool Université de Mons none
Youth organisations
  • FSC
  • GCB
  • Jeunes cdH
MJS MJS
  • SGP
  • Les Jeunes Réformateurs
Banks Volksdepositokas Spaarbank Dexia none Bank van De Post Banque de La Poste Bank von der Post Generale Bankmaatschappij Générale de Banque Generale Bank
Sport clubs
  • Sporta [nl]
  • Gym & Dans Vlaanderen
none none
  • AVB (1919–2000)
  • FROS (1976–2000)
  • VASCO (1993–2000)
  • FROS Amateursportconfederatie vzw (since 2000)
none none none none none

Proporz in Austria edit

The Austrian version of Verzuiling is the long-standing Proporz doctrine (a hypocorism for Proportionalität, German for 'proportionality'). This was first only within the politics of the second Austrian republic, but later degenerated into a neo-corporatist system of patronage and nepotism pervading many aspects of Austrian life. The Proporz was created, developed and promoted by the two mainstream parties, the Catholic Austrian People's Party (ÖVP) and the Social-Democratic Socialist Party of Austria (since 1991 Social Democratic Party of Austria, both names with the acronym of SPÖ).

This de facto two-party system collapsed with the elections of 1999, which resulted in the joining of the national-conservative Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ), whose political marginalisation and that of its predecessor, the Federation of Independents (VdU), was the main reason for the establishment of the Proporz policy, because of their pro-German, far right and individualist views.

The Proporz system arose out of the need for balanced, consensual governance in the early years of Austria's second republic. At that time, the country was consumed in an effort to rebuild the country after the devastation of World War II. Thus, the doctrine of Proporz is intimately linked to the idea of the grand coalition, in which the major political parties, in the case of post-war Austria the SPÖ and the ÖVP, share in the government.

Like in the Netherlands or in Belgium the main parties have partly to this day, "black" and "red" parallel organizations, e.g. B. at touring clubs (ÖAMTC vs. ARBÖ), factions inside the Austrian Trade Union Federation (FCG vs. FSG vs. Freiheitlichen Arbeitnehmer (FPÖ)) or sports associations (Sportunion vs. ASKÖ).

Italy edit

A similar phenomena existed during the First Italian Republic.

There are multiple trade unions: Italian Confederation of Workers' Trade Unions (CISL) which was close Christian Democracy (DC), Italian General Confederation of Labour (CGIL), close to Italian Communist Party (PCI), General Labour Union, allied to the Italian Social Movement (MSI) and the Italian Labour Union which had ties Italian Republican Party (PRI) and Italian Democratic Socialist Party (PSDI).

The state-owned public broadcaster RAI was split between the parties too. Rai 1 was said to be close to DC, Rai 2 was said to be close to PSI and Rai 3 to PCI.

Northern Ireland edit

The term "pillarisation" has also been used to describe segregation of the two main ethnoreligious groups in Northern Ireland,[4] especially between the foundation of Northern Ireland (1922) and the end of The Troubles (1969–1998);[5] segregation and pillarisation persist but are declining.[6] A difference in Northern Ireland is that one group (the ProtestantUnionistLoyalist population) enjoyed clear political, economic and social dominance over the other group (the Catholicsnationalistrepublicans).[7] This has been described as pillarisation "without consociationalism."[8][9]

People Protestants Catholics
National identity[8] "British", "Northern Irish" or "Ulster" "Irish" or "Northern Irish"
Religions Church of Ireland
Presbyterianism
Methodism
Roman Catholicism
Political persuasions Unionism
Loyalism
Ulster nationalism
Protestant Irish nationalism
Irish nationalism
Irish republicanism
Irish republican socialism
Dissident republican
Political parties Democratic Unionist Party
Ulster Unionist Party
Traditional Unionist Voice
Progressive Unionist Party
Sinn Féin
Social Democratic and Labour Party
Workers' Party
Aontú
Irish Republican Socialist Party
Nationalist Party (before 1977)
Fraternal organisations Apprentice Boys of Derry
Orange Order
Independent Orange Order
Royal Arch Purple
Royal Black Institution
Grand Lodge of Ireland
Ancient Order of Hibernians
Knights of Saint Columbanus
Unions Ulster Workers' Council Irish Congress of Trade Unions
Languages English, Ulster Scots
British Sign Language, Northern Ireland Sign Language
English and Irish
Irish Sign Language, Northern Ireland Sign Language
Schools[10] Protestant schools, state schools Catholic schools[11]
Universities[12] Queen's University of Belfast
Magee College
Ulster University
Stranmillis University College
Universities in Great Britain
Ulster University
St Mary's University College, Belfast
Universities in the Republic of Ireland
Sports[13][14] Rugby union
Cricket
Field hockey
Soccer (most clubs)
Gaelic football
Hurling and camogie
Soccer (Cliftonville, Derry City; Belfast Celtic until 1949)
Banks[15] Ulster Bank
Belfast Banking Company (to 1970)
Northern Bank (to 2012)[16][17]
Bank of Ireland
Hibernian Bank (to 1958)
Newspapers Belfast Telegraph
News Letter[18]
Sunday Life
Northern Whig (until 1963)
Protestant Telegraph (1966–82)
The Irish News[19]
An Phoblacht
(1984–2008)
TV and radio[20] BBC Northern Ireland[21]
UTV
BBC Radio Ulster
Pirate radio: Voice of Ulster, Radio Orange, Radio Shankill, Radio Sundown, Radio Free Ulster
RTÉ (Republic of Ireland state broadcaster)
Pirate radio: Radio Free Belfast, Radio Free Derry

Especially since the Belfast Agreement (1998), efforts have been made to break down segregation. "Cross-community" political parties such as the Alliance Party, Green Party and People Before Profit exist, and a growing number of people who identify and vote as "other,"[22][23] rather than for "Catholic" or "Protestant" identities, as well as growing numbers of atheists;[24] but elections are often derided as a "sectarian head-count," with growing Protestant anxiety over the possibility of a Catholic majority.[25][26] Historically, other non-sectarian political parties also operated, most notably the Northern Ireland Labour Party and the Northern Ireland Women's Coalition.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ John Halsey Wood Jr., Going Dutch in the Modern Age: Abraham Kuyper's Struggle for a Free Church in the Netherlands (2013).
  2. ^ a b c d Van Zanden, Jan L. (1998), The Economic History of the Netherlands 1914-1995: A small open economy in the 'long' twentieth century, Routledge, p. 10
  3. ^ Seebohm Rowntree's Land and Labour, Lessons from Belgium (1911), quoted in Cliff, Tony (Spring 1961). "Belgium: Strike to Revolution?". International Socialism. 1 (4): 10–7. Retrieved 19 May 2016.
  4. ^ Newey, Glen. "A Brief History of a Broken Country".
  5. ^ "A brief history of strife". The Economist.
  6. ^ Andeweg, Rudy B.; Irwin, Galen A.; Louwerse, Tom (August 27, 2020). Governance and Politics of the Netherlands. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781352010398 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ Darby, John; Darby, John P. (December 9, 1976). Conflict in Northern Ireland: The Development of a Polarised Community. Gill and Macmillan. ISBN 9780064915809 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ a b Catterall, Peter; Kaiser, Wolfram; Walton-Jordan, Ulrike (May 12, 2014). Reforming the Constitution: Debates in Twentieth-Century Britain. Routledge. ISBN 9781135305628 – via Google Books.
  9. ^ Consociationalism, Pillarization and Conflict-management in the Low Countries. Boom. December 9, 1984. ISBN 9789060095607 – via Google Books.
  10. ^ "Ben Lowry: Protestant numbers have fallen because they were early to secularism". www.newsletter.co.uk. September 24, 2022.
  11. ^ "Are Catholic Schools worth keeping in Northern Ireland?". The Irish News. June 10, 2021.
  12. ^ "CCRU: Majority Minority Review No. 1: Education and Religion in Northern Ireland, Section 8". cain.ulster.ac.uk.
  13. ^ Darby, John (1978). "Northern Ireland: Bonds and Breaks in Education". British Journal of Educational Studies. 26 (3): 215–223. doi:10.2307/3120731. JSTOR 3120731 – via JSTOR.
  14. ^ MacKenna, Ewan (March 30, 2013). "Billy's boys still cast long shadow". Irish Examiner.
  15. ^ Kenny, Mary (January 23, 2017). "Change is great - as long as it means I don't have to switch my bank account". Belfast Telegraph.
  16. ^ "The Vacuum: A Life In Banking - Interview with David Keith by Richard West". www.thevacuum.org.uk.
  17. ^ Benn, James R. (September 1, 2009). Evil for Evil. Soho Press. ISBN 9781569477021 – via Google Books.
  18. ^ "CAIN: Issues: Sectarianism: Brewer, John D. 'Northern Ireland: 1921-1998'". cain.ulster.ac.uk.
  19. ^ Campbell, Jim (October 9, 1985). "Northern Ireland: Shoot the Journalist". Index on Censorship. 14 (5): 2–3. doi:10.1080/03064228508533941. S2CID 143822975.
  20. ^ "The BBC and national identity in Britain, 1922-53 | Reviews in History". reviews.history.ac.uk.
  21. ^ "Northern Protestants. Part two. Dunseith's Talkback listeners". Belfasttelegraph.co.uk – via www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk.
  22. ^ "The rise of the 'others': 20 years after devolution, a new middle ground in Northern Irish politics?". Centre on Constitutional Change.
  23. ^ "Rise of the 'others' and not Sinn Féin the real story of Northern politics". The Irish Times.
  24. ^ "Northern Ireland's atheists: 'We're a sizeable section of the population'". The Irish Times.
  25. ^ "The 'sectarian headcount'". The 'sectarian headcount' | 8 | Religion, Identity and Politics in Nor. doi:10.4324/9781315244709-8/sectarian-headcount-claire-mitchell (inactive 1 August 2023). {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of August 2023 (link)
  26. ^ "Counting Catholics is not sectarian head-counting but countering the original sectarian headcount". www.newsletter.co.uk. March 30, 2018.

Further reading edit

  • Deschouwer, Kris (2001), "Freezing pillars and frozen cleavages: Party systems and voting alignments in consociational democracies", Party Systems and Voter Alignments Revisited, Routledge, pp. 205–221
  • Lijphart, Arend (1968), Verzuiling, pacificatie en kentering in de Nederlandse politiek (Pillarization, pacification and change in Dutch politics) (in Dutch), Amsterdam: De Bussy, retrieved 19 May 2023. Classical study on pillarisation in the Netherlands.
  • Post, Harry (1989), Pillarization: An Analysis of Dutch and Belgian Society, Avebury
  • van Schendelen, M. P. C. M. (1984), Consociationalism, pillarization and conflict-management in the Low Countries, Boom
  • Christophe de Voogd: "Histoire des Pays-Bas des origines à nos jours", Fayard, Paris, 2004

pillarisation, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Pillarisation news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Pillarisation from the Dutch verzuiling is the vertical separation of citizens into groups by religion and associated political beliefs These societies were and in some areas still are divided into two or more groups known as pillars Dutch zuilen The best known examples of this have historically occurred in the Netherlands and Belgium Each pillar may have its own social institutions and social organizations These may include its own newspapers broadcasting organisations political parties trade unions farmers associations banks stores schools hospitals universities scouting organisations and sports clubs Such segregation means that many people have little or no personal contact with members of other pillars Contents 1 Netherlands 1 1 Institutions by pillar 1 2 Depillarisation 2 Belgium 2 1 Institutions by pillar with their ethnic divisions 3 Proporz in Austria 4 Italy 5 Northern Ireland 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingNetherlands editThe Netherlands had at least three pillars namely Protestant Catholic and social democratic Pillarisation was originally initiated by Abraham Kuyper and his Christian Democratic and neo Calvinist gereformeerd Anti Revolutionary Party ARP in the late 19th century it was part of its philosophy of sphere sovereignty 1 failed verification The Catholic pillar had the highest degree of organisation because Catholic clergy promoted the organisation of Catholics in confessional institutions Yet the conservative Protestant pillar and the Socialist pillar which mainly consisted of industrial workers were nearly as tightly knit 2 The Protestant hervormd Christian Historical Union CHU formed in 1908 did not organise a pillar of its own but linked to the Protestant pillar shaped by the ARP People who were not associated with one of these pillars mainly middle and upper class latitudinarian Protestants and atheists arguably set up their own pillar the liberal or general pillar Ties between general organisations were much weaker than within the other three pillars Liberals rejected the voluntary segregation of the society and denied the existence of a liberal pillar 2 The political parties usually associated with this group were the Free minded Democratic League VDB and Liberal State Party LSP Communists Humanists and ultra orthodox Protestant fundamentalists also set up similar organisations however such groups were much smaller The development of pillarisation in the Netherlands was favoured by the emancipation of working and lower middle classes on the one hand and the execution of elite control on the other hand The emancipation of the working class led to the establishment of socialist parties trade unions media cooperative shops and collectively organised leisure activities This full care of the socialist movement for its members existed similarly in other European countries The emancipation of the conservative and often strongly religious lower middle class fostered the emergence of the Protestant pillar While the Dutch bourgeoisie was rather liberal and adhered to enlightened Protestantism a large part of the lower middle class embraced a more orthodox Calvinist theology as taught by preacher and politician Abraham Kuyper 2 In 1866 Kuyper founded the gereformeerd reformed current of Protestantism it was both more conservative and more popular with ordinary people than the established Protestant churches in the Netherlands Kuyper s worldview asserted the principle of sphere sovereignty rejecting both ecclesiasticism rule of the Church over all parts of the society and statist secularism rule of the state over all parts of the society He argued that both had their own spheres in which the other was not to interfere In 1879 he founded the Anti Revolutionary Party as the political wing of his religious movement and core of the Protestant pillar At the same time new and old elites tried to maintain their control over the newly emancipated social groups For instance the Catholic clergy set up confessional unions to prevent Catholic workers from joining socialist unions One reason behind the formation of Christian parties was to counter the feared rise of left wing mass parties 2 Institutions by pillar edit The following table shows the most important institutions by pillar Protestant Catholic Socialist LiberalPolitical party before 1945 ARP from 1879 gereformeerd CHU from 1908 hervormd SGP from 1918 bevindelijk gereformeerd AB 1904 1926 RKSP 1926 1945 SDAP from 1894 LU 1885 1921 mainstream Freethinking VDB from 1901 left wing Freethinking BVL 1906 1921 old Freethinking LSP from 1921 right wing Freethinking Political parties after 1945 ARP until 1977 CHU until 1977 CDA from 1977 oecumenisch GPV 1948 2001 gereformeerd vrijgemaakt RPF 1975 2001 orthodox Protestant CU from 2001 orthodox Protestant SGP KVP until 1977 CDA from 1977 ecumenical PvdA from 1945 PvdV 1946 1948 Liberal conservative Freethinking VVD from 1948 Liberal conservative Freethinking D66 from 1966 Liberal Freethinking Broadcasting organisation NCRV Dutch Christian Radio Association EO Evangelical Broadcasting KRO Catholic Radio Broadcasting Organisation RKK Omroep Roman Catholic Communion Broadcasting VARA Association of Workers Radio Amateurs O LLiNK Left Broadcasting AVRO General United Radio Broadcasting Organisation VPRO Liberal Protestant Radio Broadcasting VRON Free Radio Broadcasting Netherlands TROS Television amp Radio Broadcasting Organisation HOS Humanist Broadcasting Foundation POWNED Well Thinking Netherlands And Such Public Broadcasting O WNL Awakened Netherlands Broadcasting Unions CNV Christian National Union from 1909 NWV Patrimonium nl gereformeerd from 1876 NKV Dutch Catholic Union 1925 1976 FNV from 1976 NVV Dutch Alliance of Unions 1906 1976 FNV from 1976 Employers PCW NKW none VNONewspapers De Standaard gereformeerd Friesch Dagblad Fryslan gereformeerd Trouw gereformeerd Nederlands Dagblad vrijgemaakt Reformatorisch Dagblad gereformeerd De Tijd 1845 1974 De Volkskrant since 1919 Het Vrije Volk Het Parool Staatscourant Public journal Algemeen Handelsblad until 1970 Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant until 1970 NRC Handelsblad from 1970 De TelegraafSchools School with bible Protestant oriented school Protestant Education Roman Catholic School Free Schools Public Schools Public SchoolsUniversities Protestantse Theologische Universiteit hervormd Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam gereformeerd Theological University of the Christian Reformed Churches bevindelijk gereformeerd Theologische Universiteit vrijgemaakt Radboud Universiteit Katholieke Universiteit Brabant State sponsored universities Universiteit voor Humanistiek Nyenrode Business UniversiteitHospitals Green Orange Cross White Yellow Cross Green CrossSport clubs NCSU NSA TvA NKS NSA NASB NRS NCS NSA NOC NSFRecreation examples Saturday football weekend rugby union Sunday football Dancing schools Sunday football korfball Folk dancing weekend rugby union field hockey weekend footballDepillarisation edit After World War II during which even the Dutch resistance was pillarised liberals and socialists but also Protestants and Catholics began to doubt the pillarised system They founded a unity movement the People s Movement Nederlandse Volksbeweging Progressives of all pillars including the Catholic resistance movement Christofoor were united in the aim to renew the political system doorbraak breakthrough But pillarisation was ingrained in Dutch society and could not be defeated that easily In order to force this breakthrough the socialist Social Democratic Workers Party the left liberal VDB and the Christian socialist CDU united to form the PvdA a progressive party which was open to all people The new party did not however gain enough support under Catholics or Reformed and the PvdA became encapsulated in the socialist pillar Television broadcasting was also pillarised but everyone watched the same broadcasts nonetheless since initially only one channel was available in the Netherlands in the 1950s During the 1960s the pillars largely broke down particularly under political criticism from D66 and the group Nieuw Links nl New Left in PvdA Because of this and of increased mobility many people could see that people from the other pillars were not that different from themselves Increased wealth and education made people independent of many of the pillarised institutions and young people did not want to be associated with these organisations anymore In 1973 two main Protestant parties ARP and CHU merged with the Catholic KVP to form the Christian Democratic Appeal CDA They first participated in the 1977 general elections In 1976 the Catholic trade union Nederlands Katholiek Vakverbond nl NKV started to cooperate with the trade union of the Socialist pillar NVV to merge into the Federatie Nederlandse Vakbeweging FNV in 1982 The pillarisation of society has not fully disappeared and many remnants can still be seen in the 21st century public television for instance is still divided among several organisations instead of being one organisation The Netherlands has both public and religious schools a divide which is also inherited from pillarisation Moreover some communities continue to behave as small pillars as of 2014 update although rather than forming the structure of society a pillar this currently moves them outside the mainstream of society Members of the Reformed Churches liberated have their own primary and secondary schools their own national newspaper and some other organisations such as a labour union Members of several pietist Reformed Churches have also founded their own schools newspaper and political party Increasingly Muslim immigrants in the Netherlands are also using the legal possibilities created for the pillarised structure of society by setting up their own schools Belgium editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Pillarisation news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Apart from having no Protestant pillar pillarisation in Belgium was very similar to that in Netherlands There was also no general pillar but a politically well organised liberal pillar In 1911 the British sociologist Seebohm Rowntree noted that in Belgium There is extraordinarily little social intercourse between Catholics and Liberals and practically none between Catholics and Socialists Politics enter into almost every phase of social activity and philanthropic effort and it is the exception rather than the rule for persons holding different political opinions to co operate in any other matter Thus in one town there will be a Catholic a Liberal and a Socialist trade union a Catholic a Liberal and a Socialist thrift society each catering for similar people but each confining its attentions to members of its own political party The separation extends to cafes gymnasia choral temperance and literary societies indeed it cuts through life 3 In both Flanders and Wallonia societies were pillarised between Catholic and Liberal political denominations which were subsequently joined by a Socialist pillar Even though the liberals were stronger in Belgium particularly in Brussels than in the Netherlands they were still relatively weak owing to their rather small bourgeois support liberal trade unions were very small De Tijd a financial daily is the newspaper aligned with the liberals as its readership consists mainly of liberal supporters However a Flemish newspaper with historical liberal roots Het Laatste Nieuws also exists citation needed Denominational many Catholic and a few Jewish schools receive some public money although not parity of funding as in the Netherlands so that tuition is almost completely free Belgian universities charge more or less the same relatively low tuition fees As a consequence of the language struggle in the latter half of the twentieth century the pillars split over the language issue which became the most significant divisive factor in the nation Now every language group has three pillars of its own The pillar system remained to be the primordial societal dividing force much longer than it was in the Netherlands Only near the end of the Cold War did it begin to lose importance at least at the individual level and to this day it continues to influence Belgian society For example even the 1999 2003 Rainbow Coalition of Guy Verhofstadt was often rendered with the terms of pillarisation The political movements that appeared in the late 20th century such as Vlaams Blok now Vlaams Belang Groen and N VA did not attempt to build pillars Pillarisation was visible even in everyday social organisations such as musical ensembles sport clubs recreational facilities etc Weakened in the current situation many major social organisations trade unions cooperatives etc still strictly follow the lines of pillars though Institutions by pillar with their ethnic divisions edit The following table is limited to the most important institutions and it shows the current division of everyone by the three ethnic groups Flemish Catholic Walloon Catholic German Catholic Flemish Socialist Walloon Socialist German Socialist Flemish Liberal Walloon Liberal German LiberalPolitical parties before 1945 Catholic Party until 1936 Catholic Bloc since 1936 Belgian Labour Party BWP POB Liberal PartyCatholic Flemish People s Party since 1936 Social Catholic Party since 1936 1 Political parties between 1945 and 1970 Christian Social Party CVP PSC Belgian Socialist Party BSP PSB Liberal Party until 1961 Party for Freedom and Progress PVV PLP PFF since 1961 Political parties after 1970 CVP until 2001 CD amp V since 2001 minorVCP 2007 2014 NCD 2012 PSC until 2002 CDH 2002 2022 Les Engages since 2022 minorMCC since 1998 CDF 2002 2012 CSP minorPDB until 2008 ProDG since 2008 SP until 2001 SP A 2001 2021 Forward since 2021 PS SP PVV until 1992 VLD 1992 2007 Open VLD since 2007 PRL since 2002 part of MR MR since 2002 PFFTrade unions Confederation of Christian Trade Unions ACV CSC General Federation of Belgian Labour ABVV FGTB General Confederation of Liberal Trade Unions of Belgium ACLVB CGSLB BoerenbondHealth insurance Christelijke Mutualiteit Mutualite chretienne Christliche Krankenkasse Socialistische Mutualiteit Mutualite socialiste Sozialistische Krankenkasse Liberale Mutualiteit Mutualite Liberale Freie KrankenkasseHospitals White Yellow Cross Christian Fund Christian Fund Center for Homecare Socialist Fund Socialist Fund Solidarity for the Family Liberal Fund Liberal FundAid agencies Caritas Vlaanderen Caritas en Belgique francophone et germanophone Caritas en Belgique Francophone Deutschsprachiges Belgien FOS Socialistische Solidariteit Solidarite Socialiste FCD Solidariteit FCD none none noneNewspapers De Standaard Gazet van Antwerpen Het Volk Het Belang van Limburg Het Nieuwsblad La Libre Belgique Grenz Echo Vooruit nl until 1978 Volksgazet nl until 1978 De Morgen since 1978 none none Het Laatste Nieuws De Tijd Le Soir noneCultural associations Davidsfonds none none Vermeylenfonds none none Willemsfonds none noneSchools Flemish Secretariat for Catholic Education Catholic Schools Flemish Association of Catholic Colleges Catholic schools Public schools Public schools Public schools Public schools non denominational private schools Public schools non denominational private schools Public schools non denominational private schoolsMajor universities Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Universite catholique de Louvain none Ghent University University of Liege none Vrije Universiteit Brussel Universite libre de Bruxelles noneOther universities University of Antwerp Industriele Hogeschool Brabant Hogeschool Universiteit Vlaams Verbond van Katholieke Hogescholen Vesalius College Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp Universite de Namur Facultes Universitaires Catholiques de Mons Facultes universitaires Saint Louis none Trans Universiteit Limburg Faculte Universitaire des Sciences Agronomiques de Gembloux none Erasmus Hogeschool Universite de Mons noneYouth organisations KVHV JONGCD amp V Katholische Academische Verbindung Leuven SGV Chiro KSJ KSA VKSJ nl KLJ nl KAJ FSC GCB Jeunes cdH Die Junge Mitte FSC GCB Rode Valken nl Animo Jong Links MJS MJS FOS VLDJONG SGP Les Jeunes Reformateurs JFF SGP MJSBanks Volksdepositokas Spaarbank Dexia none Bank van De Post Banque de La Poste Bank von der Post Generale Bankmaatschappij Generale de Banque Generale BankSport clubs Sporta nl Gym amp Dans Vlaanderen none none AVB 1919 2000 FROS 1976 2000 VASCO 1993 2000 FROS Amateursportconfederatie vzw since 2000 none none none none noneProporz in Austria editMain article Proporz This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Pillarisation news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Austrian version of Verzuiling is the long standing Proporz doctrine a hypocorism for Proportionalitat German for proportionality This was first only within the politics of the second Austrian republic but later degenerated into a neo corporatist system of patronage and nepotism pervading many aspects of Austrian life The Proporz was created developed and promoted by the two mainstream parties the Catholic Austrian People s Party OVP and the Social Democratic Socialist Party of Austria since 1991 Social Democratic Party of Austria both names with the acronym of SPO This de facto two party system collapsed with the elections of 1999 which resulted in the joining of the national conservative Freedom Party of Austria FPO whose political marginalisation and that of its predecessor the Federation of Independents VdU was the main reason for the establishment of the Proporz policy because of their pro German far right and individualist views The Proporz system arose out of the need for balanced consensual governance in the early years of Austria s second republic At that time the country was consumed in an effort to rebuild the country after the devastation of World War II Thus the doctrine of Proporz is intimately linked to the idea of the grand coalition in which the major political parties in the case of post war Austria the SPO and the OVP share in the government Like in the Netherlands or in Belgium the main parties have partly to this day black and red parallel organizations e g B at touring clubs OAMTC vs ARBO factions inside the Austrian Trade Union Federation FCG vs FSG vs Freiheitlichen Arbeitnehmer FPO or sports associations Sportunion vs ASKO Italy editA similar phenomena existed during the First Italian Republic There are multiple trade unions Italian Confederation of Workers Trade Unions CISL which was close Christian Democracy DC Italian General Confederation of Labour CGIL close to Italian Communist Party PCI General Labour Union allied to the Italian Social Movement MSI and the Italian Labour Union which had ties Italian Republican Party PRI and Italian Democratic Socialist Party PSDI The state owned public broadcaster RAI was split between the parties too Rai 1 was said to be close to DC Rai 2 was said to be close to PSI and Rai 3 to PCI Northern Ireland editSee also Segregation in Northern Ireland The term pillarisation has also been used to describe segregation of the two main ethnoreligious groups in Northern Ireland 4 especially between the foundation of Northern Ireland 1922 and the end of The Troubles 1969 1998 5 segregation and pillarisation persist but are declining 6 A difference in Northern Ireland is that one group the Protestant Unionist Loyalist population enjoyed clear political economic and social dominance over the other group the Catholics nationalist republicans 7 This has been described as pillarisation without consociationalism 8 9 People Protestants CatholicsNational identity 8 British Northern Irish or Ulster Irish or Northern Irish Religions Church of IrelandPresbyterianismMethodism Roman CatholicismPolitical persuasions UnionismLoyalismUlster nationalismProtestant Irish nationalism Irish nationalismIrish republicanismIrish republican socialismDissident republicanPolitical parties Democratic Unionist PartyUlster Unionist PartyTraditional Unionist VoiceProgressive Unionist Party Sinn FeinSocial Democratic and Labour PartyWorkers PartyAontuIrish Republican Socialist PartyNationalist Party before 1977 Fraternal organisations Apprentice Boys of DerryOrange OrderIndependent Orange OrderRoyal Arch PurpleRoyal Black InstitutionGrand Lodge of Ireland Ancient Order of Hibernians Knights of Saint ColumbanusUnions Ulster Workers Council Irish Congress of Trade UnionsLanguages English Ulster ScotsBritish Sign Language Northern Ireland Sign Language English and IrishIrish Sign Language Northern Ireland Sign LanguageSchools 10 Protestant schools state schools Catholic schools 11 Universities 12 Queen s University of Belfast Magee CollegeUlster UniversityStranmillis University CollegeUniversities in Great Britain Ulster UniversitySt Mary s University College BelfastUniversities in the Republic of IrelandSports 13 14 Rugby unionCricketField hockeySoccer most clubs Gaelic footballHurling and camogieSoccer Cliftonville Derry City Belfast Celtic until 1949 Banks 15 Ulster BankBelfast Banking Company to 1970 Northern Bank to 2012 16 17 Bank of IrelandHibernian Bank to 1958 Newspapers Belfast TelegraphNews Letter 18 Sunday LifeNorthern Whig until 1963 Protestant Telegraph 1966 82 The Irish News 19 An PhoblachtLa 1984 2008 TV and radio 20 BBC Northern Ireland 21 UTVBBC Radio UlsterPirate radio Voice of Ulster Radio Orange Radio Shankill Radio Sundown Radio Free Ulster RTE Republic of Ireland state broadcaster Pirate radio Radio Free Belfast Radio Free DerryEspecially since the Belfast Agreement 1998 efforts have been made to break down segregation Cross community political parties such as the Alliance Party Green Party and People Before Profit exist and a growing number of people who identify and vote as other 22 23 rather than for Catholic or Protestant identities as well as growing numbers of atheists 24 but elections are often derided as a sectarian head count with growing Protestant anxiety over the possibility of a Catholic majority 25 26 Historically other non sectarian political parties also operated most notably the Northern Ireland Labour Party and the Northern Ireland Women s Coalition See also edit nbsp Belgium portal nbsp Netherlands portal nbsp Politics portal nbsp Religion portal nbsp Society portalBalkanization Consociationalism Identity politics Millet Ottoman Empire Sectarianism Social environment Sui iuris Test Act Political particularismReferences edit John Halsey Wood Jr Going Dutch in the Modern Age Abraham Kuyper s Struggle for a Free Church in the Netherlands 2013 a b c d Van Zanden Jan L 1998 The Economic History of the Netherlands 1914 1995 A small open economy in the long twentieth century Routledge p 10 Seebohm Rowntree s Land and Labour Lessons from Belgium 1911 quoted in Cliff Tony Spring 1961 Belgium Strike to Revolution International Socialism 1 4 10 7 Retrieved 19 May 2016 Newey Glen A Brief History of a Broken Country A brief history of strife The Economist Andeweg Rudy B Irwin Galen A Louwerse Tom August 27 2020 Governance and Politics of the Netherlands Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781352010398 via Google Books Darby John Darby John P December 9 1976 Conflict in Northern Ireland The Development of a Polarised Community Gill and Macmillan ISBN 9780064915809 via Google Books a b Catterall Peter Kaiser Wolfram Walton Jordan Ulrike May 12 2014 Reforming the Constitution Debates in Twentieth Century Britain Routledge ISBN 9781135305628 via Google Books Consociationalism Pillarization and Conflict management in the Low Countries Boom December 9 1984 ISBN 9789060095607 via Google Books Ben Lowry Protestant numbers have fallen because they were early to secularism www newsletter co uk September 24 2022 Are Catholic Schools worth keeping in Northern Ireland The Irish News June 10 2021 CCRU Majority Minority Review No 1 Education and Religion in Northern Ireland Section 8 cain ulster ac uk Darby John 1978 Northern Ireland Bonds and Breaks in Education British Journal of Educational Studies 26 3 215 223 doi 10 2307 3120731 JSTOR 3120731 via JSTOR MacKenna Ewan March 30 2013 Billy s boys still cast long shadow Irish Examiner Kenny Mary January 23 2017 Change is great as long as it means I don t have to switch my bank account Belfast Telegraph The Vacuum A Life In Banking Interview with David Keith by Richard West www thevacuum org uk Benn James R September 1 2009 Evil for Evil Soho Press ISBN 9781569477021 via Google Books CAIN Issues Sectarianism Brewer John D Northern Ireland 1921 1998 cain ulster ac uk Campbell Jim October 9 1985 Northern Ireland Shoot the Journalist Index on Censorship 14 5 2 3 doi 10 1080 03064228508533941 S2CID 143822975 The BBC and national identity in Britain 1922 53 Reviews in History reviews history ac uk Northern Protestants Part two Dunseith s Talkback listeners Belfasttelegraph co uk via www belfasttelegraph co uk The rise of the others 20 years after devolution a new middle ground in Northern Irish politics Centre on Constitutional Change Rise of the others and not Sinn Fein the real story of Northern politics The Irish Times Northern Ireland s atheists We re a sizeable section of the population The Irish Times The sectarian headcount The sectarian headcount 8 Religion Identity and Politics in Nor doi 10 4324 9781315244709 8 sectarian headcount claire mitchell inactive 1 August 2023 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help CS1 maint DOI inactive as of August 2023 link Counting Catholics is not sectarian head counting but countering the original sectarian headcount www newsletter co uk March 30 2018 Further reading editDeschouwer Kris 2001 Freezing pillars and frozen cleavages Party systems and voting alignments in consociational democracies Party Systems and Voter Alignments Revisited Routledge pp 205 221 Lijphart Arend 1968 Verzuiling pacificatie en kentering in de Nederlandse politiek Pillarization pacification and change in Dutch politics in Dutch Amsterdam De Bussy retrieved 19 May 2023 Classical study on pillarisation in the Netherlands Post Harry 1989 Pillarization An Analysis of Dutch and Belgian Society Avebury van Schendelen M P C M 1984 Consociationalism pillarization and conflict management in the Low Countries Boom Christophe de Voogd Histoire des Pays Bas des origines a nos jours Fayard Paris 2004 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pillarisation amp oldid 1193652103, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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