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Secession

Secession is the formal withdrawal of a group from a political entity. Threats of secession can be a strategy for achieving more limited goals.[1] It is a process, which commences once a group proclaims the act of secession (e.g. declaration of independence).[2] A secession attempt might be violent or peaceful, but the goal is the creation of a new state or entity independent from the group or territory it seceded from.[3]

Prominent examples of secession and secession attempts include the Confederate States of America seceding from the Union, the former Soviet republics leaving the Soviet Union after its dissolution, Texas leaving Mexico during the Texas Revolution, Biafra leaving Nigeria and returning after losing the Nigerian Civil War, and Ireland leaving the United Kingdom.

Secession theory Edit

There is no consensus regarding the definition of political secession, and there are many new political theories on the subject.[3]

According to the 2017 book Secession and Security by political scientist Ahsan Butt, states respond violently to secessionist movements if the potential state would pose a greater threat than a violent secessionist movement would.[4] States perceive future war as likely with a potentially new state if the ethnic group driving the secessionist struggle has deep identity division with the central state, and if the regional neighbourhood is violent and unstable.[4]

Explanations for the 20th century increase in secessionism Edit

According to political scientist Bridget L. Coggins, there are four potential explanations in the academic literature for the drastic increase in state birth during the 20th century:[5]

  • Ethnonational mobilization – Ethnic minorities have been increasingly mobilized to pursue states of their own.
  • Institutional empowerment – The growing inability of empires and ethnic federations to maintain colonies and member states.
  • Relative strength – Increasingly powerful secessionist movements are more likely to achieve statehood.
  • Negotiated consent – Home states and the international community increasingly consent to secessionist demands.

Other scholars have linked secession to resource discoveries and extraction.[6] David B. Carter, H. E. Goemans and Ryan Griffiths find that border changes among states tend to conform to borders for previous administrative units.[7][8][9]

Several scholars have argued that changes in the international system have made it easier to survive and prosper as a small state.[10][11][12][13][14] Tanisha Fazal and Ryan Griffiths link increased numbers of secessions to an international system that is more favorable for new states. For example, new states can obtain assistance from international organizations, such as the International Monetary Fund, World Bank and the United Nations.[11] Alberto Alesina and Enrico Spolaore argue that greater levels of free trade and peace have reduced the benefits of being part of a larger state, thus motivating nations within larger states to seek secession.[12]

Woodrow Wilson's proclamations on self-determination in 1918 created a surge in secessionist demands.[11]

Philosophy of secession Edit

The political philosophy of the rights and moral justification for secession began to develop as recently as the 1980s.[15] American philosopher Allen Buchanan offered the first systematic account of the subject in the 1990s and contributed to the normative classification of the literature on secession. In his 1991 book Secession: The Morality of Political Divorce From Fort Sumter to Lithuania and Quebec, Buchanan outlined limited rights to secession under certain circumstances, mostly related to oppression by people of other ethnic or racial groups, and especially those previously conquered by other people.[16] In his collection of essays from secession scholars, Secession, State, and Liberty,[17] professor David Gordon challenges Buchanan, making a case that the moral status of the seceding state is unrelated to the issue of secession itself.[18]

Justifications for secession Edit

Some theories of secession emphasize a general right of secession for any reason ("Choice Theory") while others emphasize that secession should be considered only to rectify grave injustices ("Just Cause Theory").[19] Some theories do both. A list of justifications may be presented supporting the right to secede, as described by Allen Buchanan, Robert McGee, Anthony Birch,[20] Jane Jacobs,[21] Frances Kendall and Leon Louw,[22] Leopold Kohr,[23] Kirkpatrick Sale,[24] Donald W. Livingston[25] and various authors in David Gordon's "Secession, State and Liberty", includes:

  • United States President James Buchanan, Fourth Annual Message to Congress on the State of the Union December 3, 1860: "The fact is that our Union rests upon public opinion, and can never be cemented by the blood of its citizens shed in civil war. If it can not live in the affections of the people, it must one day perish. Congress possesses many means of preserving it by conciliation, but the sword was not placed in their hand to preserve it by force."
  • Former President Thomas Jefferson, in a letter to William H. Crawford, Secretary of War under President James Madison, on June 20, 1816: "In your letter to Fisk, you have fairly stated the alternatives between which we are to choose: 1, licentious commerce and gambling speculations for a few, with eternal war for the many; or, 2, restricted commerce, peace, and steady occupations for all. If any State in the Union will declare that it prefers separation with the first alternative, to a continuance in union without it, I have no hesitation in saying, 'let us separate.' I would rather the States should withdraw, which are for unlimited commerce and war, and confederate with those alone which are for peace and agriculture."[26]
  • Economic enfranchisement of an economically oppressed class that is regionally concentrated within the scope of a larger national territory.
  • The right to liberty, freedom of association and private property
  • Consent as important democratic principle; will of majority to secede should be recognized
  • Making it easier for states to join with others in an experimental union
  • Dissolving such union when goals for which it was constituted are not achieved
  • Self-defense when larger group presents lethal threat to minority or the government cannot adequately defend an area
  • Self-determination of peoples
  • Preserving culture, language, etc. from assimilation or destruction by a larger or more powerful group
  • Furthering diversity by allowing diverse cultures to keep their identity
  • Rectifying past injustices, especially past conquest by a larger power
  • Escaping "discriminatory redistribution", i.e., tax schemes, regulatory policies, economic programs, etc. that distribute resources away to another area, especially in an undemocratic fashion
  • Enhanced efficiency when the state or empire becomes too large to administer efficiently
  • Preserving "liberal purity" (or "conservative purity") by allowing less (or more) liberal regions to secede
  • Providing superior constitutional systems which allow flexibility of secession
  • Keeping political entities small and human scale through right to secession

Political scientist Aleksander Pavkovic describes five justifications for a general right of secession within liberal political theory:[27]

  • Anarcho-Capitalism: individual liberty to form political associations and private property rights together justify right to secede and to create a "viable political order" with like-minded individuals.
  • Democratic Secessionism: the right of secession, as a variant of the right of self-determination, is vested in a "territorial community" which wishes to secede from "their existing political community"; the group wishing to secede then proceeds to delimit "its" territory by the majority.
  • Communitarian Secessionism: any group with a particular "participation-enhancing" identity, concentrated in a particular territory, which desires to improve its members' political participation has a prima facie right to secede.
  • Cultural Secessionism: any group which was previously in a minority has a right to protect and develop its own culture and distinct national identity through seceding into an independent state.
  • The Secessionism of Threatened Cultures: if a minority culture is threatened within a state that has a majority culture, the minority needs a right to form a state of its own which would protect its culture.

Arguments against secession Edit

Allen Buchanan, who supports secession under limited circumstances, lists arguments that might be used against secession:[28]

  • "Protecting Legitimate Expectations" of those who now occupy territory claimed by secessionists, even in cases where that land was stolen
  • "Self Defense" if losing part of the state would make it difficult to defend the rest of it
  • "Protecting Majority Rule" and the principle that minorities must abide by them
  • "Minimization of Strategic Bargaining" by making it difficult to secede, such as by imposing an exit tax
  • "Soft Paternalism" because secession will be bad for secessionists or others
  • "Threat of Anarchy" because smaller and smaller entities may choose to secede until there is chaos, although this is not the true meaning of the political and philosophical concept
  • "Preventing Wrongful Taking" such as the state's previous investment in infrastructure
  • "Distributive Justice" arguments that wealthier areas cannot secede from poorer ones

Types of secession Edit

 
Hashim Thaçi (left) and then-US Vice President Joe Biden with the Declaration of Independence of Kosovo

Secession theorists have described a number of ways in which a political entity (city, county, canton, state) can secede from the larger or original state:[1][27][29]

  • Secession from federation or confederation (political entities with substantial reserved powers which have agreed to join together) versus secession from a unitary state (a state governed as a single unit with few powers reserved to sub-units)
  • Colonial wars of independence from an imperial state although this is decolonisation rather than secession.
  • Recursive secession, such as India decolonising from the British Empire, then Pakistan seceding from India, or Georgia seceding from the Soviet Union, then South Ossetia seceding from Georgia.
  • National (seceding entirely from the national state) versus local (seceding from one entity of the national state into another entity of the same state)
  • Central or enclave (seceding entity is completely surrounded by the original state) versus peripheral (along a border of the original state)
  • Secession by contiguous units versus secession by non-contiguous units (exclaves)
  • Separation or partition (although an entity secedes, the rest of the state retains its structure) versus dissolution (all political entities dissolve their ties and create several new states)
  • Irredentism where secession is sought in order to annex the territory to another state because of common ethnicity or prior historical links
  • Minority (a minority of the population or territory secedes) versus majority (a majority of the population or territory secedes)
  • Secession of better-off regions versus secession of worse-off regions
  • The threat of secession is sometimes used as a strategy to gain greater autonomy within the original state

Rights to secession Edit

Most sovereign states do not recognize the right to self-determination through secession in their constitutions. Many expressly forbid it. However, there are several existing models of self-determination through greater autonomy and through secession.[30]

In liberal constitutional democracies the principle of majority rule has dictated whether a minority can secede. In the United States Abraham Lincoln acknowledged that secession might be possible through amending the United States Constitution. The Supreme Court in Texas v. White held secession could occur "through revolution, or through consent of the States".[31][32] The British Parliament in 1933 held that Western Australia could secede from the Commonwealth of Australia only upon vote of a majority of the country as a whole; the previous two-thirds majority vote for secession via referendum in Western Australia was insufficient.[33]

The Chinese Communist Party followed the Soviet Union in including the right of secession in its 1931 constitution in order to entice ethnic nationalities and Tibet into joining. However, the Party eliminated the right to secession in later years, and had anti-secession clause written into the Constitution before and after the founding the People's Republic of China. The 1947 Constitution of the Union of Burma contained an express state right to secede from the union under a number of procedural conditions. It was eliminated in the 1974 constitution of the Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma (officially the "Union of Myanmar"). Burma still allows "local autonomy under central leadership".[30]

As of 1996, the constitutions of Austria, Ethiopia, France, and Saint Kitts and Nevis have express or implied rights to secession. Switzerland allows for the secession from current and the creation of new cantons. In the case of proposed Quebec separation from Canada, the Supreme Court of Canada in 1998 ruled that only both a clear majority of the province and a constitutional amendment confirmed by all participants in the Canadian federation could allow secession.[30]

The 2003 draft of the European Union Constitution allowed for the voluntary withdrawal of member states from the union, although the representatives of the member-state which wanted to leave could not participate in the withdrawal discussions of the European Council or of the Council of Ministers.[30] There was much discussion about such self-determination by minorities[34] before the final document underwent the unsuccessful ratification process in 2005. Although in 2007 the Treaty on European Union included Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union, the right to withdraw from the EU, which has been the case with Brexit.

As a result of the successful constitutional referendum held in 2003, every municipality in the Principality of Liechtenstein has the right to secede from the Principality by a vote of a majority of the citizens residing in that municipality.[35]

Indigenous peoples have a range of different forms of indigenous sovereignty and have the right of self-determination, but under current understanding of international law they have a mere "remedial" right to secession in extreme cases of abuse of their rights, because independence and sovereign statehood is a territorial and diplomatic claim and not one of self-determination and self-government respectively, generally leaving rights to secession to the internal legislation of sovereign states.

Secession movements Edit

National secessionist movements advocate for the claim that a population within a state is a nation that has the right to form its own nation-state.[36] Movements that work towards political secession may describe themselves as being autonomy, separatist, independence, self-determination, partition, devolution, decentralization, sovereignty, self-governance or decolonization movements instead of, or in addition to, being secession movements.

Australia Edit

During the 19th century, the single British colony in eastern mainland Australia, New South Wales (NSW) was progressively divided up by the British government as new settlements were formed and spread. Victoria (Vic) in 1851 and Queensland (Qld) in 1859.

However, settlers agitated to divide the colonies throughout the later part of the century; particularly in central Queensland (centred in Rockhampton) in the 1860s and 1890s, and in North Queensland (with Bowen as a potential colonial capital) in the 1870s. Other secession (or territorial separation) movements arose and these advocated the secession of New England in northern central New South Wales, Deniliquin in the Riverina district also in NSW, and Mount Gambier in the eastern part of South Australia.

Western Australia

Secession movements have surfaced several times in Western Australia (WA), where a 1933 referendum for secession from the Federation of Australia passed with a two-thirds majority. The referendum had to be ratified by the British Parliament, which declined to act, on the grounds that it would contravene the Australian Constitution.

  • The Principality of Hutt River claimed to have seceded from Australia in 1970, although its status was not recognised by Australia or any other country.

Austria Edit

After being liberated by the Red Army and the U.S. Army, Austria seceded from Nazi Germany on April 27, 1945. This took place after seven years under Nazi rule, which began with the annexation of Austria into Nazi Germany in March 1938. The secession only took place once Nazi Germany had been defeated by the Allies.

Bangladesh Edit

The Banga Sena (Bengal Army) is a separatist[37] Hindu organisation, which supports the making of a Bangabhumi/separate homeland for Bengali Hindus in the People's Republic of Bangladesh.[38] The group is led by Kalidas Baidya.[37]

The Shanti Bahini (Bengali: শান্তি বাহিনী, "Peace Force") is the name of the military wing of the Parbatya Chattagram Jana Sanghati Samiti - the United People's Party of the Chittagong Hill Tracts aims are to create an indigenous Buddhist orientated Chacomas state within SE Bangladesh.

Belgium and the Netherlands Edit

On August 25, 1830, during the reign of William I, the nationalistic opera La muette de Portici was performed in Brussels. Soon after, the Belgian Revolt occurred, which resulted in the Belgian secession from the Kingdom of the Netherlands.

Brazil Edit

In 1825, soon after the Empire of Brazil managed to defeat the Cortes-Gerais and the Portuguese Empire in an Independence War, the Platinean nationalists in Cisplatina declared independence and joined the United Provinces, which led to a stagnated war between both, as they were both weakened, without manpower and fragile politically. The peace treaty accepted Uruguay's independence, reasserted the rule of both nations over their land and some important points like free navigation in the Silver River.

Three rather disorganized secessionist rebellions happened in Grão-Pará, Bahia and Maranhão, where the people were unhappy with the Empire (these provinces were Portuguese bastions in the Independence War). The Malê Revolt, in Bahia, was an Islamic slave revolt. These three rebellions were bloodily crushed by the Empire of Brazil.

The Pernambuco was one of the most nativist of all Brazilian regions, which in five revolts (1645–1654, 1710, 1817, 1824, 1848), the province ousted the Dutch West India Company, tried to secede from the Portuguese Empire and from the Brazilian Empire. In the attempts the rebels were crushed, the leaders shot and its territory divided, nevertheless, they kept revolting until its territory was a little fraction of what it was before.

In the Ragamuffin War, the Province of Rio Grande do Sul was undergoing a (at that time common) liberal vs conservative "cold" war. After Emperor Pedro II of Brazil favoured the conservatives, the liberals took the Capital and declared an independent Republic, fighting their way to the Province of Santa Catarina, declaring the Juliana Republic. Eventually they were slowly forced back, and made a reunification peace with the Empire. The war was not a secessionist war, even if it could become if the Empire were defeated, after the Empire agreed to aid its economy by taxing Argentina's products (like dry meat), the rebels reunited with the Empire and even filled its ranks, as the rebels were very good fighters.

In modern times, the South Region of Brazil has been the centre of a secessionist movement led by an organization called The South is My Country since the 1990s. Reasons cited for South Region Brazil's secession are taxation due to it being one of the wealthiest regions in the country and political disputes with the northernmost states of Brazil as well as the recent scandal revolving around the Workers Party found to be making shady deals with state-owned oil company Petrobras and the impeachment of then-President Dilma Rousseff additionally there is also an ethnic divide as the South Region is predominately European populated primarily by Germans, Italians, Portuguese and other European countries in contrast to the rest of Brazil which is a multicultural melting pot "Racial Democracy". The South Region in 2016 voted in an unofficial referendum called "Plebisul" in which 616,917 (or half a million) voters overwhelmingly supported secession and the creation of an independent South Region by 95%. Another Brazilian secession movement is based in the state of Sao Paulo which seeks to create to make the state an independent country from the rest of Brazil.

Cameroon Edit

In October 2017, Ambazonia declared its independence from Cameroon. Less than a month beforehand, tensions had escalated into open warfare between separatists and the Cameroon Armed Forces. The conflict, known as the "Anglophone Crisis", is deeply rooted in the October 1, 1961 incomplete decolonization of the former British Southern Cameroons (UNGA Resolution 1608). On January 1, 1960, French Cameroon was granted independence from France as the Republic of Cameroon and was admitted into the United Nations. The more advanced democratic and self-ruling people of British Cameroon were instead limited to two choices. Through a UN plebiscite, they were directed to either join the federation of Nigeria or the independent Republic of Cameroon as a federation of two equal states. While the Northern Cameroons voted to join Nigeria, the Southern Cameroons voted to integrate into the Republic of Cameroon, but they did so without a formal UN Treaty of Union on record at the UN. In 1972, Cameroon used its majority population to abolish the federation and implement a system which resulted in the occupation of the former South Cameroons territory by French-speaking Cameroon administrators. To make matters worse in 1984, Cameroon returned to its name at independence "Republic of Cameroun" which did not include the territory of the former British Southern Cameroons or Ambazonia. For more than fifty years the English-speaking people of the Former British Southern Cameroons made multiple attempts both nationally and internationally to get the Cameroon government to address these issues and possibly return to the previously agreed federation at independence. When all these attempts failed in 2016 and Cameroon engaged in a military crackdown including cutting the internet in the English-speaking regions, the people of Southern Cameroons declared on October 1, 2017, the restoration of their UN state of Southern Cameroons, which they called the "Federal Republic of Ambazonia".

Canada Edit

Throughout Canada's history, there has been tension between English-speaking and French-speaking Canadians. Under the Constitutional Act of 1791, the Province of Quebec (including parts of what are today Quebec, Ontario and Newfoundland and Labrador) was divided in two: Lower Canada (which retained French law and institutions and is now part of the provinces of Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador) and Upper Canada (a new colony intended to accommodate the many new English-speaking settlers, including the United Empire Loyalists, and now part of Ontario). The intent was to provide each group with its own colony. In 1841, the two Canadas were merged into the Province of Canada. The union proved contentious, however, resulting in a legislative deadlock between English and French legislators. The difficulties of the union led (amongst other factors) in 1867 to Confederation, the adoption of a federal system that united the Province of Canada, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick (later joined by other British colonies in North America). The federal framework did not eliminate all tensions, however, leading to the Quebec sovereignty movement in the latter half of the 20th century.

Other occasional secessionist movements have included anti-Confederation movements in the 19th century Atlantic Canada (see Anti-Confederation Party), the North-West Rebellion of 1885, and various small separatism movements in Alberta particularly (see Alberta separatism) and Western Canada generally (see, for example, Western Canada Concept).

Central America Edit

After the 1823 collapse of the First Mexican Empire, the former Captaincy-General of Guatemala was organized into a new Federal Republic of Central America. In 1838 Nicaragua seceded. The Federal Republic was formally dissolved in 1840, all but one of the states having seceded amidst general disorder.

China Edit

Congo Edit

In 1960 the State of Katanga declared independence from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. United Nations troops crushed it in Operation Grand Slam.

Cyprus Edit

 
Northern Cyprus

In 1974, Greek irredentists launched a coup d'état in Cyprus, in an attempt to annex the island with Greece. Almost immediately, the Turkish Army invaded northern Cyprus to protect the interests of the ethnic Turkish minority, who in the following year formed the Turkish Federated State of Cyprus and in 1983 declared independence as the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, recognized only by Turkey.

East Timor Edit

 
September 1999 demonstration for independence from Indonesia

The Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste (also known as East Timor) has been described as having "seceded" from Indonesia.[39][40][41] After Portuguese sovereignty was terminated in 1975, East Timor was occupied by Indonesia. However, the United Nations and the International Court of Justice refused to recognize this incorporation. Therefore, the resulting civil war and eventual 2002 East Timorese vote for complete separation are better described as an independence movement.[42]

Ethiopia Edit

Following the May 1991 victory of Eritrean People's Liberation Front forces against the communist Derg regime during the Eritrean War of Independence, Eritrea (formerly known as "Medri Bahri") gained de facto independence from Ethiopia. Following the United Nations observation 1993 Eritrean independence referendum, Eritrea gained de jure independence.

European Union Edit

Before the Treaty of Lisbon entered into force on 1 December 2009 no provision in the treaties or law of the European Union outlined the ability of a state to voluntarily withdraw from the EU. The European Constitution did propose such a provision and, after the failure to ratify the Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe, that provision was then included in the Lisbon Treaty.

The treaty introduces an exit clause for members who wish to withdraw from the Union. This formalises the procedure by stating that a member state may notify the European Council that it wishes to withdraw, upon which withdrawal negotiations begin; if no other agreement is reached the treaty ceases to apply to the withdrawing state two years after such notification.[43]

On June 23, 2016, the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union in a non-binding referendum, and finally left the European Union on January 31, 2020.[44] This is informally known as Brexit.

Finland Edit

Finland successfully and peacefully seceded from the newly formed and unstable Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic in 1917, the latter led by Lenin who had goodwill towards the Finns due to their help in his revolutionary struggle. Unsuccessful attempts at greater autonomy or peaceful secession had already been made during the preceding Russian Empire but had been denied by the Russian emperor.

France Edit

France was one of the European Great Powers with populous foreign empires; like the others – the United Kingdom, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Belgium and the Netherlands; and formerly Germany and the Ottoman Empire – populous states abroad have all seceded, in most cases granted independence. These generally took place at similar stages by continent, see decolonization of the Ottoman Empire, Americas, Asia and Africa. As to France's contiguous state, these have few present representatives at the national level, see:

Gran Colombia Edit

 
Map showing the shrinking territory of Gran Colombia from 1824 to 1890 (red line). Panama separated from Colombia in 1903.

After a decade of tumultuous federalism, Ecuador and Venezuela seceded from Gran Colombia in 1830, leaving the similarly tumultuous United States of Colombia, now the Republic of Colombia which also lost Panama in 1903.

India Edit

Pakistan seceded from the British Indian empire in what is known as the Partition. Today, the Constitution of India does not allow Indian states to secede from the Union.

The Indian Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir hosts some paramilitary Muslim-state-advocating nationalists, operating against the Indian establishment. They are mostly in the Valley of Kashmir since 1989, where the Indian Army sometimes patrols, having bases along the nearby international border. They are supported by Pakistan which has allegedly funded many terrorist, separatist outfits for destabilising India according to the Indian Research and Analysis Wing, though the country denies any direct involvement. The Kashmir insurgency reached at its peak influence in the 1990s.

Other secessionist movements in Nagaland, Assam, Manipur, Punjab (known as the Khalistan movement), Mizoram and Tripura, Tamil Nadu . The violent Naxalite–Maoist insurgency operates in eastern rural India is rarely considered secessionist as its goal is to overthrow the government of India. The Communist Party of India (Maoist)'s commanders idealise a Communist republic to be made up swathes of India.

Iran Edit

Active secession movements include: Iranian Azeri, Assyrian independence movement, Bakhtiary lurs movement in 1876, Iranian Kurdistan; Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (KDPI), Khūzestān Province Balochistan and independence movement for free separated Balochistan, (Arab nationalist); Al-Ahwaz Arab People's Democratic Popular Front, Democratic Solidarity Party of Al-Ahwaz (See Politics of Khūzestān Province: Arab politics and separatism), and Balochistan People's Party (BPP) supporting Baloch Separatism.[45]

Italy Edit

The Movement for the Independence of Sicily (Movimento Indipendentista Siciliano, MIS) has its roots in the Sicilian Independence Movement of the late 1940s; they have been around for 60 years. Today, the MIS no longer exists, though many other parties have been born. One is Nation Sicily (Sicilia Nazione), which still believes in the idea that Sicily, due to its deeply personal and ancient history, has to be a sovereign country. Moreover, a common ideology shared by all the Sicilian independentist movements is to fight against Cosa Nostra and all the other Mafia organizations, that have a very deep influence over Sicily's public and private institutions. Also, the Sicilian branch of the Five Star Movement, which is according to the polls Sicily's most popular party, has publicly expressed the intention to start working for a possible secession from Italy in the case where the central government would not collaborate in shifting the nation's administrative organization from a unitary country to a federal state. Lega Nord has been seeking the independence of the so-called region of Padania, which includes lands along the Po Valley in northern Italy. Some organizations separately work for the independence of Venetia or Veneto and the secession or reunification of South Tyrol with Austria. Lega Nord governing Lombardy has expressed a will in turning the region into a sovereign country. Also, the island of Sardinia is home to a notable nationalist movement. In Southern Italy, several movements have expressed a will to secede from Italy. This newborn ideology is so-called neo-Bourbonic, because the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies was under the control of the House of Bourbon. The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies was created in 1816 after the Congress of Vienna, and it comprised both Sicily and continental Southern Italy. The Kingdom came to an end in 1861, being annexed to the newborn Kingdom of Italy. However, the patriotic feelings shared among the southern Italian population is more ancient, starting in 1130 with the Kingdom of Sicily, which was composed by both the island and south Italy. According to the neo-Bourbonic movements the Italian regions which should secede are Sicily, Calabria, Basilicata, Apulia, Molise, Campania, Abruzzo, and Latio's provinces of Rieti, Latina and Frosinone. The major movements and parties which believe in this ideology are Unione Mediterranea, Mo! and Briganti.

Japan Edit

The ethnic Ryukyuan (a branch of modern Okinawan) people had their own state historically (Ryukyu Kingdom). Although some Okinawan people have sought independence from Japan since they were annexed by Japan in 1879, and especially after 1972 when the islands were transferred from U.S. rule to Japan, their activism and movement have been consistently supported by single digit[46] of Okinawan people.[47]

Malaysia Edit

When racial and partisan strife erupted, Singapore was expelled from the Malaysian federation in 1965.

Mexico Edit

 
The Territorial evolution of Mexico after independence, noting losses to the US (red, white and orange) and the secession of Central America (purple)

Netherlands Edit

The United Provinces of the Netherlands, commonly referred to historiographically as the 'Dutch Republic', was a federal republic formally established from the formal creation of a federal state in 1581 by several Dutch provinces seceded from Spain.

New Zealand Edit

Secession movements have surfaced several times in the South Island of New Zealand. A Premier of New Zealand, Sir Julius Vogel, was amongst the first people to make this call, which was voted on by the Parliament of New Zealand as early as 1865. The desire for South Island independence was one of the main factors in moving the capital of New Zealand from Auckland to Wellington in the same year.

The NZ South Island Party with a pro-South agenda, fielded only five candidates (4.20% of electoral seats) candidates in the 1999 General Election but achieved only 0.14% (2622 votes) of the general vote. The reality today is that although "South Islanders" are most proud of their geographic region, secession does not carry any real constituency; the party was not able to field any candidates in the 2008 election, as they had less than 500 paying members, a requirement by the New Zealand Electoral commission. The party is treated more as a "joke" party than any real political force.

Nigeria Edit

 
A girl during the Nigerian Civil War of the late 1960s. Pictures of the famine caused by Nigerian blockade garnered sympathy for the Biafrans worldwide.

Between 1967 and 1970, the Eastern Region seceded from Nigeria and established the Republic of Biafra, which led to a war that ended with the state returning to Nigeria.[48] In 1999, at the beginning of a new democratic regime, other secessionist movements emerged, including the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra, formed as a military wing of the Republic of Biafra.[49]

Norway and Sweden Edit

Sweden, having left the Kalmar Union with Denmark–Norway in the 16th century, entered into a loose personal union with Norway in 1814. Following a constitutional crisis, on June 7, 1905 the Norwegian Storting declared that King Oscar II had failed to fulfil his constitutional duties. He was therefore no longer King of Norway and because the union depended on the two countries sharing a king, it was thus dissolved. After negotiations, Sweden agreed to this on October 26 and on April 14.

Pakistan Edit

After the Awami League won the 1970 national elections, negotiations to form a new government floundered, resulting in the Bangladesh Liberation War by which East Pakistan seceded, becoming Bangladesh. The Balochistan Liberation Army (also Baloch Liberation Army or Boluchistan Liberation Army) (BLA) is a Baloch nationalist militant secessionist organization. The stated goals of the organization include the establishment of an independent state of Balochistan free of Pakistani, Iranian and Afghan Federations. The name Baloch Liberation Army first became public in the summer of 2000, after the organization claimed credit for a series of bomb attacks in markets and removal of railways lines.[citation needed]

Papua New Guinea Edit

The island of Bougainville has made several efforts to secede from Papua New Guinea.

Somalia Edit

Somaliland is an autonomous region,[50] which is part of the Federal Republic of Somalia.[51][52] Those who call the area the Republic of Somaliland consider it to be the successor state of the former British Somaliland protectorate. Having established its own local government in Somalia in 1991, the region's self-declared independence remains unrecognized by any country or international organization.[53][54]

South Africa Edit

In 1910, following the British Empire's defeat of the Afrikaners in the Boer Wars, four self-governing colonies in the south of Africa were merged into the Union of South Africa. The four regions were the Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Natal and Transvaal. Three other territories, High Commission Territories of Bechuanaland (now Botswana), Basutoland (now Lesotho) and Swaziland (now Eswatini) later became independent states in the 1960s. Following the election of the Nationalist government in 1948, some English-speaking whites in Natal advocated either secession or a loose federation.[55] There were also calls for secession, with Natal and the eastern part of the Cape Province breaking away.[56] following the referendum in 1960 on establishing a republic, and in 1993, prior to South Africa's first elections under universal suffrage and the end of apartheid, some Zulu leaders in KwaZulu-Natal[57] considered secession as did some politicians in the Cape Province.[58]

In 2008, a political movement calling for the return to independence of the Cape resurged in the shape of the political organisation, the Cape Party. The Cape Party contested their first elections on 22 April 2009.[59] They finished the Western Cape provincial elections in 2019 with 9,331 votes, or 0,45% of votes, gaining no seats[60]

The idea gained popularity in the early half of the 2020s, with polling suggesting that 58% of Western Cape Voters want a referendum on independence in July 2021.[61]

South Sudan Edit

A referendum took place in Southern Sudan from 9 to 15 January 2011, on whether the region should remain a part of Sudan or become independent. The referendum was one of the consequences of the 2005 Naivasha Agreement between the Khartoum central government and the Sudan People's Liberation Army/Movement (SPLA/M).

A simultaneous referendum was supposed to be held in Abyei on whether to join Southern Sudan but it has been postponed because of conflict over demarcation and residency rights.

On 7 February 2011, the referendum commission published the final results, with 98.83% voting in favour of independence. While the ballots were suspended in 10 of the 79 counties for exceeding 100% of the voter turnout, the number of votes was still well over the requirement of 60% turnout, and the majority vote for secession is not in question.

The predetermined date for the creation of an independent state was 9 July 2011.

Soviet Union Edit

 
Changes in national boundaries in Eurasia in the decades following the end of the Cold War

The Constitution of the Soviet Union guaranteed all SSRs the right to secede from the Union. In 1990, after free elections, the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic declared independence and other republics soon followed. Despite the Soviet central government's refusal to recognize the independence of the republics, the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991.

Spain Edit

 
A republican mural in Belfast showing solidarity with the Basque nationalism

Present-day Spain (known officially as "the Kingdom of Spain") was assembled as a central state in the French model between the 18th and 19th centuries from various component kingdoms with varying languages, cultures and legislations. Spain has several secessionist movements, the most notable ones being in Catalonia, the Basque Country and Galicia.

Sri Lanka Edit

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, operated a de facto independent state for Tamils called Tamil Eelam in eastern and northern Sri Lanka until 2009.

Switzerland Edit

In 1847, seven disaffected Catholic cantons formed a separate alliance because of moves to change the cantons of Switzerland from a confederation to a more centralized government federation. This effort was crushed in the Sonderbund War and a new Swiss Federal Constitution was created.[62]

Ukraine Edit

 
Donetsk status referendum organized by pro-Russian separatists. A line to enter a polling place, 11 May 2014.

In 2014 after the start of Russian intervention in Ukraine, several groups of people declared the independence of several Ukrainian regions:

  • The Donetsk People's Republic was declared to be independent from Ukraine on 7 April 2014, comprising the territory of the Donetsk Oblast. There have been military confrontations between the Ukrainian Army and the forces of the Donetsk People's Republic when the Ukrainian Government attempted to reassert control over the oblast.
  • The Lugansk Parliamentary Republic was proclaimed on 27 April 2014.[63] before being succeeded by the Lugansk People's Republic. The Lugansk forces have successfully occupied vital buildings in Lugansk since 8 April, and controlled the City Council, prosecutor's office, and police station since 27 April.[64] The Government of the Lugansk Oblast announced its support for a referendum, and granted the governorship to independence leader Valeriy Bolotov.[65]

United Kingdom Edit

 
A mural in Belfast depicting the Easter Rising of 1916

The Republic of Ireland withdrew from the United Kingdom after Ireland proclaimed independence in 1916 and, as the Irish Free State, gained independence in 1922. The United Kingdom has a number of secession movements:

United States Edit

Discussions and threats of secession often surfaced in American politics during the first half of the 19th century, and secession was declared by the Confederate States of America in the South during the American Civil War. However, in 1869, the United States Supreme Court ruled in Texas v. White that unilateral secession was not permitted, saying that the union between a state (Texas in the case before the bar) "was as complete, as perpetual, and as indissoluble as the union between the original States. There was no place for reconsideration or revocation, except through revolution or through consent of the States."[32][31]

Yemen Edit

North Yemen and South Yemen merged in 1990; tensions led to a 1994 southern secession which was crushed in a civil war.[67]

Yugoslavia Edit

 
A destroyed T-34-85 tank in Karlovac, Croatian War of Independence, 1992

On June 25, 1991, Croatia and Slovenia seceded from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Bosnia and Herzegovina and North Macedonia also declared independence, after which the federation broke up, causing the separation of the remaining two countries Serbia and Montenegro. Several wars ensued between the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and seceding entities and among other ethnic groups in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and later, Kosovo. Montenegro peacefully separated from its union with Serbia in 2006.

Kosovo unilaterally declared de facto independence from Serbia on February 17, 2008, and was recognized by several dozen countries, but officially remains under United Nations administration.

See also Edit

Lists Edit

Topics Edit

Movements Edit

References Edit

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  2. ^ Pavkovic, Aleksandar; Radan, Peter (2013). The Ashgate Research Companion to Secession. Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 3. ISBN 9780754677024.
  3. ^ a b Pavkovic, Aleksandar; Radan, Peter (2007). Creating New States: Theory and Practice of Secession. Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing. p. 6. ISBN 9780754671633.
  4. ^ a b Butt, Ahsan I. (2017-11-15). Secession and Security: Explaining State Strategy against Separatists. Cornell Studies in Security Affairs. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 9781501713941.
  5. ^ Coggins, Bridget (2011). "Friends in High Places: International Politics and the Emergence of States from Secessionism". International Organization. 65 (3): 433–467. doi:10.1017/S0020818311000105. ISSN 1531-5088. S2CID 145424331.
  6. ^ Gehring, Kai; Schneider, Stephan A. (2020). "Regional resources and democratic secessionism". Journal of Public Economics. 181: 104073. doi:10.1016/j.jpubeco.2019.104073. ISSN 0047-2727.
  7. ^ Carter, David B.; Goemans, H. E. (2011). "The Making of the Territorial Order: New Borders and the Emergence of Interstate Conflict". International Organization. 65 (2): 275–309. doi:10.1017/S0020818311000051. ISSN 0020-8183. JSTOR 23016813. S2CID 54863822.
  8. ^ Griffiths, Ryan D. (2015). "Between Dissolution and Blood: How Administrative Lines and Categories Shape Secessionist Outcomes". International Organization. 69 (3): 731–751. doi:10.1017/S0020818315000077. ISSN 0020-8183. S2CID 154530138.
  9. ^ Abramson, Scott F.; Carter, David B. (2016). "The Historical Origins of Territorial Disputes". American Political Science Review. 110 (4): 675–698. doi:10.1017/S0003055416000381. ISSN 0003-0554. S2CID 152201006.
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  11. ^ a b c Fazal, Tanisha M.; Griffiths, Ryan D. (2014). "Membership Has Its Privileges: The Changing Benefits of Statehood". International Studies Review. 16 (1): 79–106. doi:10.1111/misr.12099. ISSN 1521-9488.
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  15. ^ Pavkovic, Aleksandar; Radan, Peter (2008). On the Way to Statehood: Secession and Globalisation. Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 133. ISBN 9780754673798.
  16. ^ Allen Buchanan, Secession: The Morality of Political Divorce From Fort Sumter to Lithuania and Quebec, West View Press, 1991.
  17. ^ Gordon, David (February 28, 2002). Secession, State, and Liberty. ISBN 0765809435.
  18. ^ Gordon, David (December 5, 2012). "Is Secession a Right?". Mises Institute.
  19. ^ Allen Buchanan, How can We Construct a Political Theory of Secession?, paper presented October 5, 2006 to the International Studies Association.
  20. ^ Anthony H. Birch, "Another Liberal Theory of Secession". Political Studies 32, 1984, 596–602.
  21. ^ Jane Jacobs, Cities and the Wealth of Nations, Vintage, 1985.
  22. ^ Frances Kendall and Leon Louw, After Apartheid: The Solution for South Africa, Institute for Contemporary Studies, 1987. One of several popular books they wrote about canton-based constitutional alternatives that include an explicit right to secession.
  23. ^ Leopold Kohr, The Breakdown of Nations, Routledge & K. Paul, 1957
  24. ^ Human Scale, Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1980.
  25. ^ Livingston, Donald (1998). The Secession Tradition in America. New Jersey: Transaction Publishers. pp. 17–49. ISBN 1-56000-362-6.
  26. ^ "Full text of "The writings of Thomas Jefferson;"". archive.org. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  27. ^ a b Aleksandar Pavkovic, Secession, Majority Rule and Equal Rights: a Few Questions, Macquarie University Law Journal, 2003.
  28. ^ Allen Buchanan, Secession: The Morality of Political Divorce From Fort Sumter to Lithuania and Quebec, Chapter 3, pp. 87–123.
  29. ^ Steven Yates, "When Is Political Divorce Justified" in David Gordon, 1998.
  30. ^ a b c d Andrei Kreptul, The Constitutional Right of Secession in Political Theory and History, Journal of Libertarian Studies, Ludwig von Mises Institute, Volume 17, no. 4 (Fall 2003), pp. 39–100.
  31. ^ a b Aleksandar Pavković, Peter Radan, Creating New States: Theory and Practice of Secession, p. 222, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2007.
  32. ^ a b Texas v. White, 74 U.S. 700 (1868) at Cornell University Law School Supreme Court collection.
  33. ^ Aleksandar Pavkovic and Peter Radan, In Pursuit of Sovereignty and Self-determination: Peoples, States and Secession in the International Order, Index of papers, Macquarie University Law Journal, 1, 2003.
  34. ^ Xenophon Contiades, Sixth Scholarly Panel: Cultural Identity in the New Europe, 1st Global Conference on Federalism and the Union of European Democracies, March 2004. January 5, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  35. ^ . fuerstenhaus.li. Archived from the original on 2017-01-02. Retrieved 2017-01-02.
  36. ^ Roeder, Philip G. (2018). National Secession: Persuasion and Violence in Independence Campaigns. Cornell University Press. pp. 23–25. ISBN 978-1-5017-2598-2. JSTOR 10.7591/j.ctt21h4x5m.
  37. ^ a b Seema Guha (2004-01-07). "Dhaka seeks proof, Delhi readies maps". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on February 3, 2013. Retrieved 2008-06-30.
  38. ^ . Indiainfo.com. 2003-02-18. Archived from the original on 2008-09-04. Retrieved 2008-06-30.
  39. ^ Santosh C. Saha, Perspectives on contemporary ethnic conflict, p. 63, Lexington Books, 2006 ISBN 0-7391-1085-3.
  40. ^ Paul D. Elliot, The East Timor Dispute, The International and Comparative Law Quarterly, Vol. 27, No. 1 (Jan., 1978).
  41. ^ James J. Fox, Dionísio Babo Soares, Out of the ashes: destruction and reconstruction of East Timor, p. 175, ANU E Press, 2003, ISBN 0-9751229-1-6
  42. ^ Thomas D. Musgrave, Self-determination and national minorities, p. xiii, Oxford University Press, 2000 ISBN 0-19-829898-6
  43. ^ Poptcheva, Eva-Maria (February 2016). "Article 50 TEU: Withdrawal of a Member State from the EU" (PDF). europa.eu.
  44. ^ Payne, Adam. "Business Insider". businessinsider.com. Business Insider. Retrieved December 20, 2019.
  45. ^ "UNPO: West Balochistan". unpo.org. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  46. ^ "Opinion Polls among Residents of the Okinawa Prefecture (Japanese)". Asahi Shinbun Digital. Asahi Shinbun. 12 May 2017. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  47. ^ Molasky, Michael S., 1956– (8 March 2001). The American Occupation of Japan and Okinawa: Literature and Memory. ISBN 978-0-203-98168-9. OCLC 1048580450.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  48. ^ Daly, Samuel Fury Childs (2020-08-07). A History of the Republic of Biafra. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781108887748. ISBN 978-1-108-88774-8. S2CID 225266768.
  49. ^ Moses, A. Dirk, editor. Heerten, Lasse, editor. (6 July 2017). Postcolonial conflict and the question of genocide: the Nigeria-Biafra War, 1967–1970. ISBN 978-1-351-85866-3. OCLC 993762001. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  50. ^ No Winner Seen in Somalia's Battle With Chaos New York Times, June 2, 2009
  51. ^ The Transitional Federal Charter of the Somali Republic 2009-03-25 at the Wayback Machine: "The Somali Republic shall have the following boundaries. (a) North; Gulf of Aden. (b) North West; Djibouti. (c) West; Ethiopia. (d) South south-west; Kenya. (e) East; Indian Ocean."
  52. ^ "The World Factbook". cia.gov. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  53. ^ Lacey, Marc (June 5, 2006). "The Signs Say Somaliland, but the World Says Somalia". The New York Times.
  54. ^ "UN in Action: Reforming Somaliland's Judiciary" (PDF).
  55. ^ TIME, Monday, May 11, 1953
  56. ^ Secession Talked by Some Anti-Republicans, Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, 11 October 1960
  57. ^ Launching Democracy in South Africa: The First Open Election, April 1994, R. W. Johnson, Lawrence Schlemmer, Yale University Press, 1996
  58. ^ Party Wants the Cape to Secede", Business Day, December 24, 1993.
  59. ^ Cape Party Website, Monday, May 11, 1953
  60. ^ "Results Dashboard". www.elections.org.za. Retrieved 2019-05-11.
  61. ^ Charles, Marvin. "Cape Independence: Lobby group says recent survey 'places intense pressure' on DA to hold referendum". News24. Retrieved 2021-08-31.
  62. ^ A Brief Survey of Swiss History, Switzerland Federal Department of Foreign Affairs.
  63. ^ "Federalization supporters in Luhansk proclaim people's republic". TASS: World. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  64. ^ "Ukraine crisis: Pro-Russia activists take Luhansk offices". BBC News. 29 April 2014. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
  65. ^ "Luhansk regional council backs referendum on region's status". kyivpost.com. 5 May 2014. Retrieved 6 May 2014.
  66. ^ Smout, Alistair; MacLellan, Kylie; Holton, Kate (September 19, 2014). "Scotland stays in UK, but Britain faces change". Reuters – Special Report. Retrieved September 19, 2014.
  67. ^ Hiro, Dilip (2019-03-01), "Saudi-Iranian Détente", Cold War in the Islamic World, Oxford University Press, pp. 141–162, doi:10.1093/oso/9780190944650.003.0009, ISBN 978-0-19-094465-0

Further reading Edit

  • Buchanan, Allen, Justice, Legitimacy, and Self-Determination: Moral Foundations for International Law (Oxford Political Theory), Oxford University Press, 2007.
  • Buchanan, Allen, Secession: The Morality Of Political Divorce From Fort Sumter To Lithuania And Quebec, Westview Press, 1991.
  • Coppieters, Bruno; Richard Sakwa, Richard (eds.), Contextualizing Secession: Normative Studies in Comparative Perspective, Oxford University Press, USA, 2003
  • Kohen, Marcelo G. (ed.), Secession: International Law Perspectives, Cambridge University Press, 2006.
  • Kohr, Leopold, The Breakdown of Nations, Routledge & K. Paul, 1957.
  • Lehning, Percy, Theories of Secession, Routledge, 1998.
  • López Martín, Ana Gemma and Perea Unceta, José Antonio, Statehood and Secession: Lessons from Spain and Catalonia, Routledge, 2021
  • Norman, Wayne, Negotiating Nationalism: Nation-Building, Federalism, and Secession in the Multinational State, Oxford University Press, 2006.
  • Roeder, Philip G. 2018. National secession: persuasion and violence in independence campaigns. Cornell University Press.
  • Sorens, Jason, Secessionism: Identity, Interest, and Strategy, McGill-Queen's University Press, 2012.
  • Sorens, Jason (2008). "Secessionism". In Hamowy, Ronald (ed.). Sessionism. The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE; Cato Institute. pp. 455–56. doi:10.4135/9781412965811.n277. ISBN 978-1-4129-6580-4. LCCN 2008009151. OCLC 750831024.
  • Spencer, Metta, Separatism: Democracy and Disintegration, Rowman & Littlefield, 1998.
  • Weller, Marc, Autonomy, Self Governance and Conflict Resolution (Kindle Edition), Taylor & Francis, 2007.
  • Wellman, Christopher Heath, A Theory of Secession, Cambridge University Press, 2005.
  • Secession And International Law: Conflict Avoidance – regional Appraisals, United Nations Publications, 2006.
  • Rudowski, Tomasz; Sieniawski, Piotr (2020). "Latin America: The Region without Catalonia". International Studies. Interdisciplinary Political and Cultural Journal. 25 (1): 111–128. doi:10.18778/1641-4233.25.07. hdl:11089/34321. S2CID 232292615.

External links Edit

secession, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, require, copy, editing, grammar, style, cohesion, tone, spelling, assist, editing, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, formal, withdrawal, group, from, political, entity, threats, secession. For other uses see Secession disambiguation This article may require copy editing for grammar style cohesion tone or spelling You can assist by editing it May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Secession is the formal withdrawal of a group from a political entity Threats of secession can be a strategy for achieving more limited goals 1 It is a process which commences once a group proclaims the act of secession e g declaration of independence 2 A secession attempt might be violent or peaceful but the goal is the creation of a new state or entity independent from the group or territory it seceded from 3 Prominent examples of secession and secession attempts include the Confederate States of America seceding from the Union the former Soviet republics leaving the Soviet Union after its dissolution Texas leaving Mexico during the Texas Revolution Biafra leaving Nigeria and returning after losing the Nigerian Civil War and Ireland leaving the United Kingdom Contents 1 Secession theory 1 1 Explanations for the 20th century increase in secessionism 2 Philosophy of secession 2 1 Justifications for secession 2 2 Arguments against secession 3 Types of secession 4 Rights to secession 5 Secession movements 5 1 Australia 5 2 Austria 5 3 Bangladesh 5 4 Belgium and the Netherlands 5 5 Brazil 5 6 Cameroon 5 7 Canada 5 8 Central America 5 9 China 5 10 Congo 5 11 Cyprus 5 12 East Timor 5 13 Ethiopia 5 14 European Union 5 15 Finland 5 16 France 5 17 Gran Colombia 5 18 India 5 19 Iran 5 20 Italy 5 21 Japan 5 22 Malaysia 5 23 Mexico 5 24 Netherlands 5 25 New Zealand 5 26 Nigeria 5 27 Norway and Sweden 5 28 Pakistan 5 29 Papua New Guinea 5 30 Somalia 5 31 South Africa 5 32 South Sudan 5 33 Soviet Union 5 34 Spain 5 35 Sri Lanka 5 36 Switzerland 5 37 Ukraine 5 38 United Kingdom 5 39 United States 5 40 Yemen 5 41 Yugoslavia 6 See also 6 1 Lists 6 2 Topics 6 3 Movements 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksSecession theory EditThere is no consensus regarding the definition of political secession and there are many new political theories on the subject 3 According to the 2017 book Secession and Security by political scientist Ahsan Butt states respond violently to secessionist movements if the potential state would pose a greater threat than a violent secessionist movement would 4 States perceive future war as likely with a potentially new state if the ethnic group driving the secessionist struggle has deep identity division with the central state and if the regional neighbourhood is violent and unstable 4 Explanations for the 20th century increase in secessionism Edit According to political scientist Bridget L Coggins there are four potential explanations in the academic literature for the drastic increase in state birth during the 20th century 5 Ethnonational mobilization Ethnic minorities have been increasingly mobilized to pursue states of their own Institutional empowerment The growing inability of empires and ethnic federations to maintain colonies and member states Relative strength Increasingly powerful secessionist movements are more likely to achieve statehood Negotiated consent Home states and the international community increasingly consent to secessionist demands Other scholars have linked secession to resource discoveries and extraction 6 David B Carter H E Goemans and Ryan Griffiths find that border changes among states tend to conform to borders for previous administrative units 7 8 9 Several scholars have argued that changes in the international system have made it easier to survive and prosper as a small state 10 11 12 13 14 Tanisha Fazal and Ryan Griffiths link increased numbers of secessions to an international system that is more favorable for new states For example new states can obtain assistance from international organizations such as the International Monetary Fund World Bank and the United Nations 11 Alberto Alesina and Enrico Spolaore argue that greater levels of free trade and peace have reduced the benefits of being part of a larger state thus motivating nations within larger states to seek secession 12 Woodrow Wilson s proclamations on self determination in 1918 created a surge in secessionist demands 11 Philosophy of secession EditThe political philosophy of the rights and moral justification for secession began to develop as recently as the 1980s 15 American philosopher Allen Buchanan offered the first systematic account of the subject in the 1990s and contributed to the normative classification of the literature on secession In his 1991 book Secession The Morality of Political Divorce From Fort Sumter to Lithuania and Quebec Buchanan outlined limited rights to secession under certain circumstances mostly related to oppression by people of other ethnic or racial groups and especially those previously conquered by other people 16 In his collection of essays from secession scholars Secession State and Liberty 17 professor David Gordon challenges Buchanan making a case that the moral status of the seceding state is unrelated to the issue of secession itself 18 Justifications for secession Edit Some theories of secession emphasize a general right of secession for any reason Choice Theory while others emphasize that secession should be considered only to rectify grave injustices Just Cause Theory 19 Some theories do both A list of justifications may be presented supporting the right to secede as described by Allen Buchanan Robert McGee Anthony Birch 20 Jane Jacobs 21 Frances Kendall and Leon Louw 22 Leopold Kohr 23 Kirkpatrick Sale 24 Donald W Livingston 25 and various authors in David Gordon s Secession State and Liberty includes United States President James Buchanan Fourth Annual Message to Congress on the State of the Union December 3 1860 The fact is that our Union rests upon public opinion and can never be cemented by the blood of its citizens shed in civil war If it can not live in the affections of the people it must one day perish Congress possesses many means of preserving it by conciliation but the sword was not placed in their hand to preserve it by force Former President Thomas Jefferson in a letter to William H Crawford Secretary of War under President James Madison on June 20 1816 In your letter to Fisk you have fairly stated the alternatives between which we are to choose 1 licentious commerce and gambling speculations for a few with eternal war for the many or 2 restricted commerce peace and steady occupations for all If any State in the Union will declare that it prefers separation with the first alternative to a continuance in union without it I have no hesitation in saying let us separate I would rather the States should withdraw which are for unlimited commerce and war and confederate with those alone which are for peace and agriculture 26 Economic enfranchisement of an economically oppressed class that is regionally concentrated within the scope of a larger national territory The right to liberty freedom of association and private property Consent as important democratic principle will of majority to secede should be recognized Making it easier for states to join with others in an experimental union Dissolving such union when goals for which it was constituted are not achieved Self defense when larger group presents lethal threat to minority or the government cannot adequately defend an area Self determination of peoples Preserving culture language etc from assimilation or destruction by a larger or more powerful group Furthering diversity by allowing diverse cultures to keep their identity Rectifying past injustices especially past conquest by a larger power Escaping discriminatory redistribution i e tax schemes regulatory policies economic programs etc that distribute resources away to another area especially in an undemocratic fashion Enhanced efficiency when the state or empire becomes too large to administer efficiently Preserving liberal purity or conservative purity by allowing less or more liberal regions to secede Providing superior constitutional systems which allow flexibility of secession Keeping political entities small and human scale through right to secessionPolitical scientist Aleksander Pavkovic describes five justifications for a general right of secession within liberal political theory 27 Anarcho Capitalism individual liberty to form political associations and private property rights together justify right to secede and to create a viable political order with like minded individuals Democratic Secessionism the right of secession as a variant of the right of self determination is vested in a territorial community which wishes to secede from their existing political community the group wishing to secede then proceeds to delimit its territory by the majority Communitarian Secessionism any group with a particular participation enhancing identity concentrated in a particular territory which desires to improve its members political participation has a prima facie right to secede Cultural Secessionism any group which was previously in a minority has a right to protect and develop its own culture and distinct national identity through seceding into an independent state The Secessionism of Threatened Cultures if a minority culture is threatened within a state that has a majority culture the minority needs a right to form a state of its own which would protect its culture Arguments against secession Edit Allen Buchanan who supports secession under limited circumstances lists arguments that might be used against secession 28 Protecting Legitimate Expectations of those who now occupy territory claimed by secessionists even in cases where that land was stolen Self Defense if losing part of the state would make it difficult to defend the rest of it Protecting Majority Rule and the principle that minorities must abide by them Minimization of Strategic Bargaining by making it difficult to secede such as by imposing an exit tax Soft Paternalism because secession will be bad for secessionists or others Threat of Anarchy because smaller and smaller entities may choose to secede until there is chaos although this is not the true meaning of the political and philosophical concept Preventing Wrongful Taking such as the state s previous investment in infrastructure Distributive Justice arguments that wealthier areas cannot secede from poorer onesTypes of secession Edit Hashim Thaci left and then US Vice President Joe Biden with the Declaration of Independence of KosovoSecession theorists have described a number of ways in which a political entity city county canton state can secede from the larger or original state 1 27 29 Secession from federation or confederation political entities with substantial reserved powers which have agreed to join together versus secession from a unitary state a state governed as a single unit with few powers reserved to sub units Colonial wars of independence from an imperial state although this is decolonisation rather than secession Recursive secession such as India decolonising from the British Empire then Pakistan seceding from India or Georgia seceding from the Soviet Union then South Ossetia seceding from Georgia National seceding entirely from the national state versus local seceding from one entity of the national state into another entity of the same state Central or enclave seceding entity is completely surrounded by the original state versus peripheral along a border of the original state Secession by contiguous units versus secession by non contiguous units exclaves Separation or partition although an entity secedes the rest of the state retains its structure versus dissolution all political entities dissolve their ties and create several new states Irredentism where secession is sought in order to annex the territory to another state because of common ethnicity or prior historical links Minority a minority of the population or territory secedes versus majority a majority of the population or territory secedes Secession of better off regions versus secession of worse off regions The threat of secession is sometimes used as a strategy to gain greater autonomy within the original stateRights to secession EditSee also Self determination Most sovereign states do not recognize the right to self determination through secession in their constitutions Many expressly forbid it However there are several existing models of self determination through greater autonomy and through secession 30 In liberal constitutional democracies the principle of majority rule has dictated whether a minority can secede In the United States Abraham Lincoln acknowledged that secession might be possible through amending the United States Constitution The Supreme Court in Texas v White held secession could occur through revolution or through consent of the States 31 32 The British Parliament in 1933 held that Western Australia could secede from the Commonwealth of Australia only upon vote of a majority of the country as a whole the previous two thirds majority vote for secession via referendum in Western Australia was insufficient 33 The Chinese Communist Party followed the Soviet Union in including the right of secession in its 1931 constitution in order to entice ethnic nationalities and Tibet into joining However the Party eliminated the right to secession in later years and had anti secession clause written into the Constitution before and after the founding the People s Republic of China The 1947 Constitution of the Union of Burma contained an express state right to secede from the union under a number of procedural conditions It was eliminated in the 1974 constitution of the Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma officially the Union of Myanmar Burma still allows local autonomy under central leadership 30 As of 1996 the constitutions of Austria Ethiopia France and Saint Kitts and Nevis have express or implied rights to secession Switzerland allows for the secession from current and the creation of new cantons In the case of proposed Quebec separation from Canada the Supreme Court of Canada in 1998 ruled that only both a clear majority of the province and a constitutional amendment confirmed by all participants in the Canadian federation could allow secession 30 The 2003 draft of the European Union Constitution allowed for the voluntary withdrawal of member states from the union although the representatives of the member state which wanted to leave could not participate in the withdrawal discussions of the European Council or of the Council of Ministers 30 There was much discussion about such self determination by minorities 34 before the final document underwent the unsuccessful ratification process in 2005 Although in 2007 the Treaty on European Union included Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union the right to withdraw from the EU which has been the case with Brexit As a result of the successful constitutional referendum held in 2003 every municipality in the Principality of Liechtenstein has the right to secede from the Principality by a vote of a majority of the citizens residing in that municipality 35 Indigenous peoples have a range of different forms of indigenous sovereignty and have the right of self determination but under current understanding of international law they have a mere remedial right to secession in extreme cases of abuse of their rights because independence and sovereign statehood is a territorial and diplomatic claim and not one of self determination and self government respectively generally leaving rights to secession to the internal legislation of sovereign states Secession movements EditMain articles Lists of active separatist movements and List of historical separatist movements See also the categories Separatism by country and Secessionist organizations National secessionist movements advocate for the claim that a population within a state is a nation that has the right to form its own nation state 36 Movements that work towards political secession may describe themselves as being autonomy separatist independence self determination partition devolution decentralization sovereignty self governance or decolonization movements instead of or in addition to being secession movements Australia Edit Main article Proposals for new Australian States During the 19th century the single British colony in eastern mainland Australia New South Wales NSW was progressively divided up by the British government as new settlements were formed and spread Victoria Vic in 1851 and Queensland Qld in 1859 However settlers agitated to divide the colonies throughout the later part of the century particularly in central Queensland centred in Rockhampton in the 1860s and 1890s and in North Queensland with Bowen as a potential colonial capital in the 1870s Other secession or territorial separation movements arose and these advocated the secession of New England in northern central New South Wales Deniliquin in the Riverina district also in NSW and Mount Gambier in the eastern part of South Australia Western AustraliaMain article Secessionism in Western Australia Secession movements have surfaced several times in Western Australia WA where a 1933 referendum for secession from the Federation of Australia passed with a two thirds majority The referendum had to be ratified by the British Parliament which declined to act on the grounds that it would contravene the Australian Constitution The Principality of Hutt River claimed to have seceded from Australia in 1970 although its status was not recognised by Australia or any other country Austria Edit After being liberated by the Red Army and the U S Army Austria seceded from Nazi Germany on April 27 1945 This took place after seven years under Nazi rule which began with the annexation of Austria into Nazi Germany in March 1938 The secession only took place once Nazi Germany had been defeated by the Allies Bangladesh Edit Main article United People s Democratic Front The Banga Sena Bengal Army is a separatist 37 Hindu organisation which supports the making of a Bangabhumi separate homeland for Bengali Hindus in the People s Republic of Bangladesh 38 The group is led by Kalidas Baidya 37 The Shanti Bahini Bengali শ ন ত ব হ ন Peace Force is the name of the military wing of the Parbatya Chattagram Jana Sanghati Samiti the United People s Party of the Chittagong Hill Tracts aims are to create an indigenous Buddhist orientated Chacomas state within SE Bangladesh Belgium and the Netherlands Edit Main article Belgian Revolution On August 25 1830 during the reign of William I the nationalistic opera La muette de Portici was performed in Brussels Soon after the Belgian Revolt occurred which resulted in the Belgian secession from the Kingdom of the Netherlands Further information Partition of Belgium Brazil Edit In 1825 soon after the Empire of Brazil managed to defeat the Cortes Gerais and the Portuguese Empire in an Independence War the Platinean nationalists in Cisplatina declared independence and joined the United Provinces which led to a stagnated war between both as they were both weakened without manpower and fragile politically The peace treaty accepted Uruguay s independence reasserted the rule of both nations over their land and some important points like free navigation in the Silver River Three rather disorganized secessionist rebellions happened in Grao Para Bahia and Maranhao where the people were unhappy with the Empire these provinces were Portuguese bastions in the Independence War The Male Revolt in Bahia was an Islamic slave revolt These three rebellions were bloodily crushed by the Empire of Brazil The Pernambuco was one of the most nativist of all Brazilian regions which in five revolts 1645 1654 1710 1817 1824 1848 the province ousted the Dutch West India Company tried to secede from the Portuguese Empire and from the Brazilian Empire In the attempts the rebels were crushed the leaders shot and its territory divided nevertheless they kept revolting until its territory was a little fraction of what it was before In the Ragamuffin War the Province of Rio Grande do Sul was undergoing a at that time common liberal vs conservative cold war After Emperor Pedro II of Brazil favoured the conservatives the liberals took the Capital and declared an independent Republic fighting their way to the Province of Santa Catarina declaring the Juliana Republic Eventually they were slowly forced back and made a reunification peace with the Empire The war was not a secessionist war even if it could become if the Empire were defeated after the Empire agreed to aid its economy by taxing Argentina s products like dry meat the rebels reunited with the Empire and even filled its ranks as the rebels were very good fighters In modern times the South Region of Brazil has been the centre of a secessionist movement led by an organization called The South is My Country since the 1990s Reasons cited for South Region Brazil s secession are taxation due to it being one of the wealthiest regions in the country and political disputes with the northernmost states of Brazil as well as the recent scandal revolving around the Workers Party found to be making shady deals with state owned oil company Petrobras and the impeachment of then President Dilma Rousseff additionally there is also an ethnic divide as the South Region is predominately European populated primarily by Germans Italians Portuguese and other European countries in contrast to the rest of Brazil which is a multicultural melting pot Racial Democracy The South Region in 2016 voted in an unofficial referendum called Plebisul in which 616 917 or half a million voters overwhelmingly supported secession and the creation of an independent South Region by 95 Another Brazilian secession movement is based in the state of Sao Paulo which seeks to create to make the state an independent country from the rest of Brazil Cameroon Edit Main article Anglophone Crisis In October 2017 Ambazonia declared its independence from Cameroon Less than a month beforehand tensions had escalated into open warfare between separatists and the Cameroon Armed Forces The conflict known as the Anglophone Crisis is deeply rooted in the October 1 1961 incomplete decolonization of the former British Southern Cameroons UNGA Resolution 1608 On January 1 1960 French Cameroon was granted independence from France as the Republic of Cameroon and was admitted into the United Nations The more advanced democratic and self ruling people of British Cameroon were instead limited to two choices Through a UN plebiscite they were directed to either join the federation of Nigeria or the independent Republic of Cameroon as a federation of two equal states While the Northern Cameroons voted to join Nigeria the Southern Cameroons voted to integrate into the Republic of Cameroon but they did so without a formal UN Treaty of Union on record at the UN In 1972 Cameroon used its majority population to abolish the federation and implement a system which resulted in the occupation of the former South Cameroons territory by French speaking Cameroon administrators To make matters worse in 1984 Cameroon returned to its name at independence Republic of Cameroun which did not include the territory of the former British Southern Cameroons or Ambazonia For more than fifty years the English speaking people of the Former British Southern Cameroons made multiple attempts both nationally and internationally to get the Cameroon government to address these issues and possibly return to the previously agreed federation at independence When all these attempts failed in 2016 and Cameroon engaged in a military crackdown including cutting the internet in the English speaking regions the people of Southern Cameroons declared on October 1 2017 the restoration of their UN state of Southern Cameroons which they called the Federal Republic of Ambazonia Canada Edit Main article Secessionist movements of Canada Throughout Canada s history there has been tension between English speaking and French speaking Canadians Under the Constitutional Act of 1791 the Province of Quebec including parts of what are today Quebec Ontario and Newfoundland and Labrador was divided in two Lower Canada which retained French law and institutions and is now part of the provinces of Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador and Upper Canada a new colony intended to accommodate the many new English speaking settlers including the United Empire Loyalists and now part of Ontario The intent was to provide each group with its own colony In 1841 the two Canadas were merged into the Province of Canada The union proved contentious however resulting in a legislative deadlock between English and French legislators The difficulties of the union led amongst other factors in 1867 to Confederation the adoption of a federal system that united the Province of Canada Nova Scotia and New Brunswick later joined by other British colonies in North America The federal framework did not eliminate all tensions however leading to the Quebec sovereignty movement in the latter half of the 20th century Other occasional secessionist movements have included anti Confederation movements in the 19th century Atlantic Canada see Anti Confederation Party the North West Rebellion of 1885 and various small separatism movements in Alberta particularly see Alberta separatism and Western Canada generally see for example Western Canada Concept Central America Edit After the 1823 collapse of the First Mexican Empire the former Captaincy General of Guatemala was organized into a new Federal Republic of Central America In 1838 Nicaragua seceded The Federal Republic was formally dissolved in 1840 all but one of the states having seceded amidst general disorder China Edit The Anti Secession Law against the Taiwan independence movement Western regions of Xinjiang East Turkistan and Tibet are the focus of secessionist calls by the Tibetan independence movement and East Turkestan Independence Movement The Special Administrative Region of Hong Kong has a secessionist movement in the city that the Chinese Communist Party has placed on the national security agenda in 2017 which is called the Hong Kong independence movement Congo Edit In 1960 the State of Katanga declared independence from the Democratic Republic of the Congo United Nations troops crushed it in Operation Grand Slam Cyprus Edit Northern CyprusIn 1974 Greek irredentists launched a coup d etat in Cyprus in an attempt to annex the island with Greece Almost immediately the Turkish Army invaded northern Cyprus to protect the interests of the ethnic Turkish minority who in the following year formed the Turkish Federated State of Cyprus and in 1983 declared independence as the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus recognized only by Turkey East Timor Edit September 1999 demonstration for independence from IndonesiaThe Democratic Republic of Timor Leste also known as East Timor has been described as having seceded from Indonesia 39 40 41 After Portuguese sovereignty was terminated in 1975 East Timor was occupied by Indonesia However the United Nations and the International Court of Justice refused to recognize this incorporation Therefore the resulting civil war and eventual 2002 East Timorese vote for complete separation are better described as an independence movement 42 Ethiopia Edit Following the May 1991 victory of Eritrean People s Liberation Front forces against the communist Derg regime during the Eritrean War of Independence Eritrea formerly known as Medri Bahri gained de facto independence from Ethiopia Following the United Nations observation 1993 Eritrean independence referendum Eritrea gained de jure independence European Union Edit Main article Withdrawal from the European Union See also 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum Before the Treaty of Lisbon entered into force on 1 December 2009 no provision in the treaties or law of the European Union outlined the ability of a state to voluntarily withdraw from the EU The European Constitution did propose such a provision and after the failure to ratify the Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe that provision was then included in the Lisbon Treaty The treaty introduces an exit clause for members who wish to withdraw from the Union This formalises the procedure by stating that a member state may notify the European Council that it wishes to withdraw upon which withdrawal negotiations begin if no other agreement is reached the treaty ceases to apply to the withdrawing state two years after such notification 43 On June 23 2016 the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union in a non binding referendum and finally left the European Union on January 31 2020 44 This is informally known as Brexit Finland Edit Finland successfully and peacefully seceded from the newly formed and unstable Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic in 1917 the latter led by Lenin who had goodwill towards the Finns due to their help in his revolutionary struggle Unsuccessful attempts at greater autonomy or peaceful secession had already been made during the preceding Russian Empire but had been denied by the Russian emperor France Edit France was one of the European Great Powers with populous foreign empires like the others the United Kingdom Spain Portugal Italy Belgium and the Netherlands and formerly Germany and the Ottoman Empire populous states abroad have all seceded in most cases granted independence These generally took place at similar stages by continent see decolonization of the Ottoman Empire Americas Asia and Africa As to France s contiguous state these have few present representatives at the national level see Alsace independence movement Breton independence Corsican nationalism Occitan nationalismGran Colombia Edit Map showing the shrinking territory of Gran Colombia from 1824 to 1890 red line Panama separated from Colombia in 1903 After a decade of tumultuous federalism Ecuador and Venezuela seceded from Gran Colombia in 1830 leaving the similarly tumultuous United States of Colombia now the Republic of Colombia which also lost Panama in 1903 India Edit Main article Separatist movements of India Pakistan seceded from the British Indian empire in what is known as the Partition Today the Constitution of India does not allow Indian states to secede from the Union The Indian Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir hosts some paramilitary Muslim state advocating nationalists operating against the Indian establishment They are mostly in the Valley of Kashmir since 1989 where the Indian Army sometimes patrols having bases along the nearby international border They are supported by Pakistan which has allegedly funded many terrorist separatist outfits for destabilising India according to the Indian Research and Analysis Wing though the country denies any direct involvement The Kashmir insurgency reached at its peak influence in the 1990s Other secessionist movements in Nagaland Assam Manipur Punjab known as the Khalistan movement Mizoram and Tripura Tamil Nadu The violent Naxalite Maoist insurgency operates in eastern rural India is rarely considered secessionist as its goal is to overthrow the government of India The Communist Party of India Maoist s commanders idealise a Communist republic to be made up swathes of India Iran Edit Active secession movements include Iranian Azeri Assyrian independence movement Bakhtiary lurs movement in 1876 Iranian Kurdistan Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran KDPI Khuzestan Province Balochistan and independence movement for free separated Balochistan Arab nationalist Al Ahwaz Arab People s Democratic Popular Front Democratic Solidarity Party of Al Ahwaz See Politics of Khuzestan Province Arab politics and separatism and Balochistan People s Party BPP supporting Baloch Separatism 45 Italy Edit The Movement for the Independence of Sicily Movimento Indipendentista Siciliano MIS has its roots in the Sicilian Independence Movement of the late 1940s they have been around for 60 years Today the MIS no longer exists though many other parties have been born One is Nation Sicily Sicilia Nazione which still believes in the idea that Sicily due to its deeply personal and ancient history has to be a sovereign country Moreover a common ideology shared by all the Sicilian independentist movements is to fight against Cosa Nostra and all the other Mafia organizations that have a very deep influence over Sicily s public and private institutions Also the Sicilian branch of the Five Star Movement which is according to the polls Sicily s most popular party has publicly expressed the intention to start working for a possible secession from Italy in the case where the central government would not collaborate in shifting the nation s administrative organization from a unitary country to a federal state Lega Nord has been seeking the independence of the so called region of Padania which includes lands along the Po Valley in northern Italy Some organizations separately work for the independence of Venetia or Veneto and the secession or reunification of South Tyrol with Austria Lega Nord governing Lombardy has expressed a will in turning the region into a sovereign country Also the island of Sardinia is home to a notable nationalist movement In Southern Italy several movements have expressed a will to secede from Italy This newborn ideology is so called neo Bourbonic because the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies was under the control of the House of Bourbon The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies was created in 1816 after the Congress of Vienna and it comprised both Sicily and continental Southern Italy The Kingdom came to an end in 1861 being annexed to the newborn Kingdom of Italy However the patriotic feelings shared among the southern Italian population is more ancient starting in 1130 with the Kingdom of Sicily which was composed by both the island and south Italy According to the neo Bourbonic movements the Italian regions which should secede are Sicily Calabria Basilicata Apulia Molise Campania Abruzzo and Latio s provinces of Rieti Latina and Frosinone The major movements and parties which believe in this ideology are Unione Mediterranea Mo and Briganti Japan Edit Main article Ryukyu independence movement The ethnic Ryukyuan a branch of modern Okinawan people had their own state historically Ryukyu Kingdom Although some Okinawan people have sought independence from Japan since they were annexed by Japan in 1879 and especially after 1972 when the islands were transferred from U S rule to Japan their activism and movement have been consistently supported by single digit 46 of Okinawan people 47 Malaysia Edit When racial and partisan strife erupted Singapore was expelled from the Malaysian federation in 1965 Mexico Edit The Territorial evolution of Mexico after independence noting losses to the US red white and orange and the secession of Central America purple Texas seceded from Mexico in 1836 see Texas Revolution after animosity between the Mexican government and the American settlers of the Coahuila y Tejas State It was later annexed by the United States in 1845 The Republic of the Rio Grande seceded from Mexico on January 17 1840 It rejoined Mexico on November 6 the same year After the federal system was abandoned by President Santa Anna the Congress of Yucatan approved in 1840 a declaration of independence establishing the Republic of Yucatan The Republic rejoined Mexico in 1843 Netherlands Edit The United Provinces of the Netherlands commonly referred to historiographically as the Dutch Republic was a federal republic formally established from the formal creation of a federal state in 1581 by several Dutch provinces seceded from Spain New Zealand Edit See also South Island Independence Secession movements have surfaced several times in the South Island of New Zealand A Premier of New Zealand Sir Julius Vogel was amongst the first people to make this call which was voted on by the Parliament of New Zealand as early as 1865 The desire for South Island independence was one of the main factors in moving the capital of New Zealand from Auckland to Wellington in the same year The NZ South Island Party with a pro South agenda fielded only five candidates 4 20 of electoral seats candidates in the 1999 General Election but achieved only 0 14 2622 votes of the general vote The reality today is that although South Islanders are most proud of their geographic region secession does not carry any real constituency the party was not able to field any candidates in the 2008 election as they had less than 500 paying members a requirement by the New Zealand Electoral commission The party is treated more as a joke party than any real political force Nigeria Edit A girl during the Nigerian Civil War of the late 1960s Pictures of the famine caused by Nigerian blockade garnered sympathy for the Biafrans worldwide Between 1967 and 1970 the Eastern Region seceded from Nigeria and established the Republic of Biafra which led to a war that ended with the state returning to Nigeria 48 In 1999 at the beginning of a new democratic regime other secessionist movements emerged including the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra formed as a military wing of the Republic of Biafra 49 Norway and Sweden Edit Main article Dissolution of the union between Norway and Sweden in 1905 Sweden having left the Kalmar Union with Denmark Norway in the 16th century entered into a loose personal union with Norway in 1814 Following a constitutional crisis on June 7 1905 the Norwegian Storting declared that King Oscar II had failed to fulfil his constitutional duties He was therefore no longer King of Norway and because the union depended on the two countries sharing a king it was thus dissolved After negotiations Sweden agreed to this on October 26 and on April 14 Pakistan Edit After the Awami League won the 1970 national elections negotiations to form a new government floundered resulting in the Bangladesh Liberation War by which East Pakistan seceded becoming Bangladesh The Balochistan Liberation Army also Baloch Liberation Army or Boluchistan Liberation Army BLA is a Baloch nationalist militant secessionist organization The stated goals of the organization include the establishment of an independent state of Balochistan free of Pakistani Iranian and Afghan Federations The name Baloch Liberation Army first became public in the summer of 2000 after the organization claimed credit for a series of bomb attacks in markets and removal of railways lines citation needed Papua New Guinea Edit Main article Provinces of Papua New Guinea The Bougainville issue The island of Bougainville has made several efforts to secede from Papua New Guinea Somalia Edit Somaliland is an autonomous region 50 which is part of the Federal Republic of Somalia 51 52 Those who call the area the Republic of Somaliland consider it to be the successor state of the former British Somaliland protectorate Having established its own local government in Somalia in 1991 the region s self declared independence remains unrecognized by any country or international organization 53 54 South Africa Edit Main articles Cape Independence and Volkstaat In 1910 following the British Empire s defeat of the Afrikaners in the Boer Wars four self governing colonies in the south of Africa were merged into the Union of South Africa The four regions were the Cape Colony Orange Free State Natal and Transvaal Three other territories High Commission Territories of Bechuanaland now Botswana Basutoland now Lesotho and Swaziland now Eswatini later became independent states in the 1960s Following the election of the Nationalist government in 1948 some English speaking whites in Natal advocated either secession or a loose federation 55 There were also calls for secession with Natal and the eastern part of the Cape Province breaking away 56 following the referendum in 1960 on establishing a republic and in 1993 prior to South Africa s first elections under universal suffrage and the end of apartheid some Zulu leaders in KwaZulu Natal 57 considered secession as did some politicians in the Cape Province 58 In 2008 a political movement calling for the return to independence of the Cape resurged in the shape of the political organisation the Cape Party The Cape Party contested their first elections on 22 April 2009 59 They finished the Western Cape provincial elections in 2019 with 9 331 votes or 0 45 of votes gaining no seats 60 The idea gained popularity in the early half of the 2020s with polling suggesting that 58 of Western Cape Voters want a referendum on independence in July 2021 61 South Sudan Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message A referendum took place in Southern Sudan from 9 to 15 January 2011 on whether the region should remain a part of Sudan or become independent The referendum was one of the consequences of the 2005 Naivasha Agreement between the Khartoum central government and the Sudan People s Liberation Army Movement SPLA M A simultaneous referendum was supposed to be held in Abyei on whether to join Southern Sudan but it has been postponed because of conflict over demarcation and residency rights On 7 February 2011 the referendum commission published the final results with 98 83 voting in favour of independence While the ballots were suspended in 10 of the 79 counties for exceeding 100 of the voter turnout the number of votes was still well over the requirement of 60 turnout and the majority vote for secession is not in question The predetermined date for the creation of an independent state was 9 July 2011 Soviet Union Edit Changes in national boundaries in Eurasia in the decades following the end of the Cold WarThe Constitution of the Soviet Union guaranteed all SSRs the right to secede from the Union In 1990 after free elections the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic declared independence and other republics soon followed Despite the Soviet central government s refusal to recognize the independence of the republics the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991 Spain Edit Main article Nationalisms and regionalisms of Spain A republican mural in Belfast showing solidarity with the Basque nationalismPresent day Spain known officially as the Kingdom of Spain was assembled as a central state in the French model between the 18th and 19th centuries from various component kingdoms with varying languages cultures and legislations Spain has several secessionist movements the most notable ones being in Catalonia the Basque Country and Galicia Sri Lanka Edit The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam operated a de facto independent state for Tamils called Tamil Eelam in eastern and northern Sri Lanka until 2009 Switzerland Edit In 1847 seven disaffected Catholic cantons formed a separate alliance because of moves to change the cantons of Switzerland from a confederation to a more centralized government federation This effort was crushed in the Sonderbund War and a new Swiss Federal Constitution was created 62 Ukraine Edit Donetsk status referendum organized by pro Russian separatists A line to enter a polling place 11 May 2014 In 2014 after the start of Russian intervention in Ukraine several groups of people declared the independence of several Ukrainian regions The Donetsk People s Republic was declared to be independent from Ukraine on 7 April 2014 comprising the territory of the Donetsk Oblast There have been military confrontations between the Ukrainian Army and the forces of the Donetsk People s Republic when the Ukrainian Government attempted to reassert control over the oblast The Lugansk Parliamentary Republic was proclaimed on 27 April 2014 63 before being succeeded by the Lugansk People s Republic The Lugansk forces have successfully occupied vital buildings in Lugansk since 8 April and controlled the City Council prosecutor s office and police station since 27 April 64 The Government of the Lugansk Oblast announced its support for a referendum and granted the governorship to independence leader Valeriy Bolotov 65 United Kingdom Edit Main articles Separatism in the United Kingdom and Potential breakup of the United Kingdom A mural in Belfast depicting the Easter Rising of 1916The Republic of Ireland withdrew from the United Kingdom after Ireland proclaimed independence in 1916 and as the Irish Free State gained independence in 1922 The United Kingdom has a number of secession movements In Northern Ireland Irish republicans and nationalists have long called for the secession of Northern Ireland to join the Republic of Ireland This is opposed by Unionists A minority have supported the independence of Northern Ireland from the United Kingdom without joining the Republic of Ireland In Scotland the Scottish National Party SNP campaigns for Scottish independence and direct Scottish membership in the European Union It has representation at all levels of Scottish politics and forms the devolved Scottish government Later pro independence parties have had lesser electoral success The Scottish Greens and the Scottish Socialist Party are most widely publicised However all independence movements parties are opposed by unionists A referendum on independence in which voters were asked Should Scotland be an independent country took place in September 2014 It saw no win as 55 3 of voters voted against independence 66 In Wales Plaid Cymru Party of Wales stands for Welsh independence within the European Union It is also represented at all levels of Welsh politics and has often been the second largest party in the Senedd Welsh Parliament England In Cornwall supporters of Mebyon Kernow call for the creation of a Cornish Assembly and separation from England giving the county significant self government whilst remaining within the United Kingdom as a fifth home nation London has supporters of an independent or semi autonomous city state since the 2016 EU Referendum in which Londoners voted overwhelmingly to remain in the EU A London independence party known as Londependence was established in June 2019 Their calls increased after the 2019 General Election in which most Londoners voted for the Labour Party gaining a representative bucking the national trend The Northern Independence Party is a party formed in 2020 that seeks to make Northern England an independent state under the name Northumbria United States Edit Main article Secession in the United States Discussions and threats of secession often surfaced in American politics during the first half of the 19th century and secession was declared by the Confederate States of America in the South during the American Civil War However in 1869 the United States Supreme Court ruled in Texas v White that unilateral secession was not permitted saying that the union between a state Texas in the case before the bar was as complete as perpetual and as indissoluble as the union between the original States There was no place for reconsideration or revocation except through revolution or through consent of the States 32 31 Yemen Edit North Yemen and South Yemen merged in 1990 tensions led to a 1994 southern secession which was crushed in a civil war 67 Yugoslavia Edit A destroyed T 34 85 tank in Karlovac Croatian War of Independence 1992On June 25 1991 Croatia and Slovenia seceded from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Bosnia and Herzegovina and North Macedonia also declared independence after which the federation broke up causing the separation of the remaining two countries Serbia and Montenegro Several wars ensued between the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and seceding entities and among other ethnic groups in Slovenia Croatia Bosnia and Herzegovina and later Kosovo Montenegro peacefully separated from its union with Serbia in 2006 Kosovo unilaterally declared de facto independence from Serbia on February 17 2008 and was recognized by several dozen countries but officially remains under United Nations administration See also EditLists Edit List of historical autonomist and secessionist movements List of active autonomist and secessionist movements List of unrecognized countries List of U S state secession proposals List of U S county secession proposalsTopics Edit Independence Intersectionality Irredentism Autonomy Bioregionalism City state Decentralization Homeland Micronation Nullification U S Constitution Schism religion Separatism Urban secession PartitionMovements Edit Balochistan Liberation Army Black Liberation Army Cape Independence Cascadia East Turkestan Independence Movement Essex Junto European Free Alliance Free State Project Hartford Convention Kurdistan League of the South New York City secession Orania Northern Cape Secession of Quebec Scottish Secession Church Second Vermont Republic South Carolina Exposition and Protest Texas Secession Movement Tibetan Independence Movement Unrepresented Nations and Peoples OrganizationReferences Edit a b Allen Buchanan Secession Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2007 Pavkovic Aleksandar Radan Peter 2013 The Ashgate Research Companion to Secession Burlington VT Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 3 ISBN 9780754677024 a b Pavkovic Aleksandar Radan Peter 2007 Creating New States Theory and Practice of Secession Burlington VT Ashgate Publishing p 6 ISBN 9780754671633 a b Butt Ahsan I 2017 11 15 Secession and Security Explaining State Strategy against Separatists Cornell Studies in Security Affairs Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 9781501713941 Coggins Bridget 2011 Friends in High Places International Politics and the 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2017 05 24 Small State Foreign Policy Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190228637 013 484 ISBN 978 0 19 022863 7 retrieved 2020 05 02 a b c Fazal Tanisha M Griffiths Ryan D 2014 Membership Has Its Privileges The Changing Benefits of Statehood International Studies Review 16 1 79 106 doi 10 1111 misr 12099 ISSN 1521 9488 a b Alesina Alberto 7 November 2003 The Size of Nations ISBN 9780262012041 Retrieved 2020 05 02 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Thorhallsson Baldur 2018 The small state in international relations The Small State in International Relations from Small States and Shelter Theory Iceland s External Affairs Routledge 2019 Routledge pp 13 23 doi 10 4324 9780429463167 2 ISBN 978 0 429 46316 7 S2CID 240133027 retrieved 2020 05 02 Lake David A O mahony Angela 2004 The Incredible Shrinking State Journal of Conflict Resolution 48 5 699 722 doi 10 1177 0022002704267766 ISSN 0022 0027 S2CID 8619491 Pavkovic Aleksandar Radan Peter 2008 On the Way to Statehood Secession and Globalisation Burlington VT Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 133 ISBN 9780754673798 Allen Buchanan Secession The Morality of Political Divorce From Fort Sumter to Lithuania and Quebec West View Press 1991 Gordon David February 28 2002 Secession State and Liberty ISBN 0765809435 Gordon David December 5 2012 Is Secession a Right Mises Institute Allen Buchanan How can We Construct a Political Theory of Secession paper presented October 5 2006 to the International Studies Association Anthony H Birch Another Liberal Theory of Secession Political Studies 32 1984 596 602 Jane Jacobs Cities and the Wealth of Nations Vintage 1985 Frances Kendall and Leon Louw After Apartheid The Solution for South Africa Institute for Contemporary Studies 1987 One of several popular books they wrote about canton based constitutional alternatives that include an explicit right to secession Leopold Kohr The Breakdown of Nations Routledge amp K Paul 1957 Human Scale Coward McCann amp Geoghegan 1980 Livingston Donald 1998 The Secession Tradition in America New Jersey Transaction Publishers pp 17 49 ISBN 1 56000 362 6 Full text of The writings of Thomas Jefferson archive org Retrieved 12 August 2015 a b Aleksandar Pavkovic Secession Majority Rule and Equal Rights a Few Questions Macquarie University Law Journal 2003 Allen Buchanan Secession The Morality of Political Divorce From Fort Sumter to Lithuania and Quebec Chapter 3 pp 87 123 Steven Yates When Is Political Divorce Justified in David Gordon 1998 a b c d Andrei Kreptul The Constitutional Right of Secession in Political Theory and History Journal of Libertarian Studies Ludwig von Mises Institute Volume 17 no 4 Fall 2003 pp 39 100 a b Aleksandar Pavkovic Peter Radan Creating New States Theory and Practice of Secession p 222 Ashgate Publishing Ltd 2007 a b Texas v White 74 U S 700 1868 at Cornell University Law School Supreme Court collection Aleksandar Pavkovic and Peter Radan In Pursuit of Sovereignty and Self determination Peoples States and Secession in the International Order Index of papers Macquarie University Law Journal 1 2003 Xenophon Contiades Sixth Scholarly Panel Cultural Identity in the New Europe 1st Global Conference on Federalism and the Union of European Democracies March 2004 Archived January 5 2009 at the Wayback Machine The Reform of the Constitution in 2003 fuerstenhaus li Archived from the original on 2017 01 02 Retrieved 2017 01 02 Roeder Philip G 2018 National Secession Persuasion and Violence in Independence Campaigns Cornell University Press pp 23 25 ISBN 978 1 5017 2598 2 JSTOR 10 7591 j ctt21h4x5m a b Seema Guha 2004 01 07 Dhaka seeks proof Delhi readies maps The Telegraph Archived from the original on February 3 2013 Retrieved 2008 06 30 400 Banga Sena activists held at Bangla border Indiainfo com 2003 02 18 Archived from the original on 2008 09 04 Retrieved 2008 06 30 Santosh C Saha Perspectives on contemporary ethnic conflict p 63 Lexington Books 2006 ISBN 0 7391 1085 3 Paul D Elliot The East Timor Dispute The International and Comparative Law Quarterly Vol 27 No 1 Jan 1978 James J Fox Dionisio Babo Soares Out of the ashes destruction and reconstruction of East Timor p 175 ANU E Press 2003 ISBN 0 9751229 1 6 Thomas D Musgrave Self determination and national minorities p xiii Oxford University Press 2000 ISBN 0 19 829898 6 Poptcheva Eva Maria February 2016 Article 50 TEU Withdrawal of a Member State from the EU PDF europa eu Payne Adam Business Insider businessinsider com Business Insider Retrieved December 20 2019 UNPO West Balochistan unpo org Retrieved 12 August 2015 Opinion Polls among Residents of the Okinawa Prefecture Japanese Asahi Shinbun Digital Asahi Shinbun 12 May 2017 Retrieved 22 January 2021 Molasky Michael S 1956 8 March 2001 The American Occupation of Japan and Okinawa Literature and Memory ISBN 978 0 203 98168 9 OCLC 1048580450 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Daly Samuel Fury Childs 2020 08 07 A History of the Republic of Biafra Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781108887748 ISBN 978 1 108 88774 8 S2CID 225266768 Moses A Dirk editor Heerten Lasse editor 6 July 2017 Postcolonial conflict and the question of genocide the Nigeria Biafra War 1967 1970 ISBN 978 1 351 85866 3 OCLC 993762001 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link No Winner Seen in Somalia s Battle With Chaos New York Times June 2 2009 The Transitional Federal Charter of the Somali Republic Archived 2009 03 25 at the Wayback Machine The Somali Republic shall have the following boundaries a North Gulf of Aden b North West Djibouti c West Ethiopia d South south west Kenya e East Indian Ocean The World Factbook cia gov Retrieved 12 August 2015 Lacey Marc June 5 2006 The Signs Say Somaliland but the World Says Somalia The New York Times UN in Action Reforming Somaliland s Judiciary PDF SOUTH AFRICA Cry of Secession TIME Monday May 11 1953 Secession Talked by Some Anti Republicans Saskatoon Star Phoenix 11 October 1960 Launching Democracy in South Africa The First Open Election April 1994 R W Johnson Lawrence Schlemmer Yale University Press 1996 Party Wants the Cape to Secede Business Day December 24 1993 Cape Party Website Monday May 11 1953 Results Dashboard www elections org za Retrieved 2019 05 11 Charles Marvin Cape Independence Lobby group says recent survey places intense pressure on DA to hold referendum News24 Retrieved 2021 08 31 A Brief Survey of Swiss History Switzerland Federal Department of Foreign Affairs Federalization supporters in Luhansk proclaim people s republic TASS World Retrieved 12 August 2015 Ukraine crisis Pro Russia activists take Luhansk offices BBC News 29 April 2014 Retrieved 18 January 2015 Luhansk regional council backs referendum on region s status kyivpost com 5 May 2014 Retrieved 6 May 2014 Smout Alistair MacLellan Kylie Holton Kate September 19 2014 Scotland stays in UK but Britain faces change Reuters Special Report Retrieved September 19 2014 Hiro Dilip 2019 03 01 Saudi Iranian Detente Cold War in the Islamic World Oxford University Press pp 141 162 doi 10 1093 oso 9780190944650 003 0009 ISBN 978 0 19 094465 0Further reading EditBuchanan Allen Justice Legitimacy and Self Determination Moral Foundations for International Law Oxford Political Theory Oxford University Press 2007 Buchanan Allen Secession The Morality Of Political Divorce From Fort Sumter To Lithuania And Quebec Westview Press 1991 Coppieters Bruno Richard Sakwa Richard eds Contextualizing Secession Normative Studies in Comparative Perspective Oxford University Press USA 2003 Kohen Marcelo G ed Secession International Law Perspectives Cambridge University Press 2006 Kohr Leopold The Breakdown of Nations Routledge amp K Paul 1957 Lehning Percy Theories of Secession Routledge 1998 Lopez Martin Ana Gemma and Perea Unceta Jose Antonio Statehood and Secession Lessons from Spain and Catalonia Routledge 2021 Norman Wayne Negotiating Nationalism Nation Building Federalism and Secession in the Multinational State Oxford University Press 2006 Roeder Philip G 2018 National secession persuasion and violence in independence campaigns Cornell University Press Sorens Jason Secessionism Identity Interest and Strategy McGill Queen s University Press 2012 Sorens Jason 2008 Secessionism In Hamowy Ronald ed Sessionism The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks CA SAGE Cato Institute pp 455 56 doi 10 4135 9781412965811 n277 ISBN 978 1 4129 6580 4 LCCN 2008009151 OCLC 750831024 Spencer Metta Separatism Democracy and Disintegration Rowman amp Littlefield 1998 Weller Marc Autonomy Self Governance and Conflict Resolution Kindle Edition Taylor amp Francis 2007 Wellman Christopher Heath A Theory of Secession Cambridge University Press 2005 Secession And International Law Conflict Avoidance regional Appraisals United Nations Publications 2006 Rudowski Tomasz Sieniawski Piotr 2020 Latin America The Region without Catalonia International Studies Interdisciplinary Political and Cultural Journal 25 1 111 128 doi 10 18778 1641 4233 25 07 hdl 11089 34321 S2CID 232292615 External links Edit Look up secession in Wiktionary the free dictionary Secession Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fleming Walter Lynwood 1911 Secession In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 24 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 584 585 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Secession international law Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Secession amp oldid 1167279702, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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