Multiculturalism is the political ideology that treats cultural diversity as a positive good to be actively protected and celebrated, not merely tolerated. It emerged as a response to post-1945 mass migration to Western societies and the failure of straightforward assimilation models.
Three foundational moves separate multiculturalism from liberal universalism:
The 9PL0 spec lists key concepts: the politics of recognition, cultural diversity, minority rights, communitarianism, value pluralism, the politics of difference. All five named thinkers cluster around one or more of the three strands.
The 9PL0 spec names three strands. The strand split drives Q5 answers.
Diversity within a liberal framework. Individual rights still primary; group rights only where compatible. Universal liberal values (free speech, gender equality) trump cultural claims. Kymlicka.
Stronger commitment to group rights and value pluralism. Different cultures have different valid value systems; the state should accommodate, not just tolerate. Parekh, Modood.
Diversity as a positive end in itself; mixing, hybridity and global belonging are good. No named 9PL0 spec thinker in this strand - draws on broader cosmopolitan thought.
The fault line. Liberal multiculturalism subordinates diversity to liberal universalism; pluralist multiculturalism treats diversity as more foundational. This is the heart of most Q5 disagreements.
Memorise these six. Every Q5 paragraph should anchor on at least one.
Common ground - useful for the "agree more" side.
The split lines - the meat of any "disagree" answer.
A common Q5 framing: "Multiculturalism is compatible with liberalism".
The compatibility case (Kymlicka): Liberalism prizes individual autonomy. Autonomy requires a meaningful cultural context within which to choose. Therefore liberalism implies the protection of cultural minorities, because without cultural protection individuals lose the meaningful choices that liberalism is supposed to enable. Liberalism and multiculturalism are not just compatible but mutually implicated.
The incompatibility case (Parekh, more strongly): Liberalism is itself a culture, not a neutral framework. Imposing liberal values on minority cultures is the kind of cultural imposition multiculturalism is supposed to resist. True multiculturalism requires going beyond liberalism toward genuine dialogue between traditions.
The conservative critique (not multiculturalist itself): Multiculturalism erodes shared national identity, fragments common citizenship, and produces "parallel lives" (Cantle Report 2001, post-riot inquiry). David Goodhart's "Somewheres vs Anywheres" sits in this tradition.
Per the 2025 ER reminder - reward strands and thinkers, do not reward real-world political commentary. Three rules:
What NOT to do: avoid potted accounts of real-world controversies (Rwanda plan, Sewell Report, Casey Review). Brief references are fine; lengthy summaries crowd out the ideology work. Live politics belongs in Paper 1, not in Q5.