Harnessing Social Capital for
Nation Building and
Inter-Citizen Group Peaceful Coexistence in Ethiopia:
The Role of CSOs, 5 Dec 2018, CCRDA, Addis Abeba
Moulding a Plural & Enterprising Polity & Citizenry:
A Clarion call for a Resilient Ethiopianism
Public
Lecture - RL Vol XII No 375
MMXVIII
Costantinos
Berhutesfa Costantinos, PhD
Professor
of Public Policy & Sustainable Institutional Reforms
Abstract
Students
of the 1970s demanded land to the tiller and the equality of nations &
nationalities, an ideological arsenal that informed the era and that continues
to enlighten politics heretofore, undergirded the ubiquity of imperious
economic policy, the stress on political organisation and the national
question. Half a century later, a human rights crisis stemming from the protest
against impunity is emergent, triggered by identity issues, mal governance,
corruption and impunity of officials. The state must look into local elders
(shimagiles) to contain the mayhem. Coupled with this, lodged in a highly
turbulent region, new martial and security scenarios threaten the nation.
Hence, while ethnic liberation has been accomplished, Ethiopianness must now
take the front stage to defend and advance the nation. While nations &
nationalities have realised their freedom, what is simmering on is exigency for
pluralistic governance and the statutory veneration they deserve as Ethiopians.
The transformation achieved so far also means citizens are becoming more affluent
and civically refined, demanding to be heard. A collective psyche that puts so much trust in the trappings of hegemony
must be supplanted by a social awareness that gives due respect to the highest
moral and professional benchmarks in social life. State collapse that stems
from a society, which is not based on strong institutional pillars and robust
meritocracy in its public administration, is bound to fail. Thus, the merit
system is consequential as a tried and tested route to success in
constitutional self-governance. The mystique of power is closely linked to the
lack of execution of constitutional rules and political institutions such as
the coordinates of the state and pillars of civil society.
In
advancing the economy, private sector,
capital and liberalisation of the big state owned enterprises that would
unleash untapped billions for development, are indispensable allies to
employment and livelihood security. In its transformational stance, the
state must focus on streamlining discretionary
rule of officials, eliminate
monopolies and the economic distortions that facilitate them and improve accountability. Finally, a requisite for
pluralism is a spirit of tolerance and transparency - discords resolved in a
spirit of respect for the views of citizens. Visionary leadership, political
will and public support are vital to the state’s legitimacy that twigs from meritorious
choices to district-cum-zonal officers that are in direct contact with the
populace and reform of policy-making and governing institutions. Society’s
watchdogs and responsible and independent media are indispensable assets in
curbing corruption and pursuing good governance goals consistently and in
varying contexts, but do so without resorting to a self-defeating, overly
scripted and stage-managed political gambit. The protests and the apologies
herald a new era of openness, albeit at a price!
Key words: Ethiopianism,
meritocracy, pluralism, human rights, corruption, mal governance,
See lecture here or https://www.academia.edu/37918416/Harnessing_Social_Capital_for_Nation_Building_and_Inter-Citizen_Group_Peaceful_Coexistence_in_Ethiopia_aA_Clarion_call_for_a_Resilient_Ethiopianism_-_RL_Vol_XII_No_375_MMXVIII
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