Centre for the Study of Democracy and Diversity
Does diversity harm democracy? Does it make it stronger? How are the two to be balanced? These are the kinds of questions that the Centre for the Study of Democracy and Diversity (CSDD) seeks to answer. In its teaching and research, the Centre draws on the theoretical and practical knowledge of scholars and practitioners from varied disciplines and experts in disparate methodologies to study the unique challenges – and the benefits – posed by diversity to democratic societies.
In pursuit of its interdisciplinary mission, the CSDD focuses on diversity, broadly conceived (diversity of lifestyle, philosophical diversity, racial diversity, and gender diversity, as well as the diversity that indigenous societies bring to settler-colonial societies, the diversity that immigrants create, and the diversity found in states made up of different ethnic, religious, or national communities). It also focuses on democracy, asking questions about the appropriate political institutions and policies needed for governing diverse societies, and how to evaluate these in terms of their effectiveness. It further considers the special case of states that are undergoing significant transitions, from civil war to peace and from authoritarianism to democracy (or the reverse, as in the cases of ‘illiberal democracies’).