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How to use this

Two grids on the same template. The first is empty - print it, fill in each cell with a one-line note while you revise. The second is a worked example to check yourself against.

Each cell asks one question: does this row strengthen the column quality (mark +) or weaken it (mark -)? Then add a one-line note saying why. The plus and minus columns are deliberately not pre-printed - your judgement is the work.

Value pluralism = are there many valid value systems with none ranked above the rest? Politics of recognition = must cultures be actively recognised, not just tolerated? Group / minority rights = should the law grant rights to groups, not only individuals? Limits from liberal values = do universal liberal values cap what cultures may do? Identity fixed vs fluid = is identity a fluid, hybrid, pick-and-mix thing? The state = should the state actively promote diversity beyond outlawing discrimination?

Multiculturalism strands - judgement grid +   -

Empty version. Print and fill in.
Strand+   - Value pluralism Politics of recognition Group / minority rights Limits from liberal values Identity fixed vs fluid The state
Liberal
Pluralist
Cosmopolitan
How to use the grid in an essay. Pick the column the question asks about, read down it across the rows, and judge where they agree and where they differ.

Multiculturalism strands - judgement grid +   -

Filled version. Use this to check your own grid - and tap any cell for the full detail behind the judgement.
Strand+   - Value pluralism Politics of recognition Group / minority rights Limits from liberal values Identity fixed vs fluid The state
Liberal ±Qualified: accepts Berlin's value pluralism, but only within a liberal frame that ranks autonomy first. ±Qualified: backs Taylor's recognition, but bounded by liberal democratic values, not foundational. +Holds: group-differentiated rights, but instrumental - they protect access to a context of choice (Kymlicka). +Strongly holds: liberal values cap cultural practice - no forced marriage, no FGM (Kymlicka). -Rejects the fluid view: culture is a stable context of choice to be preserved, not pick-and-mix (Kymlicka). ±Qualified: state outlaws discrimination and recognises cultures, but only within liberal limits (Kymlicka).
Pluralist +Strongly holds: many incompatible goods are equally valuable, no single hierarchy (Berlin). +Strongly holds: recognition is foundational to civic life; misrecognition harms (Taylor, Modood). +Strongly holds: group rights have standing comparable to individual rights (Parekh). -Rejects: liberalism is itself a culture, not a neutral umpire; dialogue, not bans (Parekh). -Rejects the fluid view: humans are culturally embedded; distinct cultures worth preserving (Parekh). +Strongly holds: all state functions reimagined through multiculturalism; tackle group inequality (Parekh, Modood).
Cosmopolitan ±Qualified: many cultures are valued now, but as ingredients to mix toward one shared global morality. -Rejects: the aim is hybridisation, not affirming and preserving distinct cultures (MS position). -Rejects: identity is fluid and individual, so fixed group rights cut against hybridity (MS position). ±Qualified: not built on liberal limits, but it shares the drive toward one shared global morality. +Strongly holds: identity is fluid and hybridised; humans are pick-and-mix global citizens (MS position). +Holds an active state, but for global hybridisation and cooperation, not national group policy (MS position).
What the filled grid shows. Read down each column to see which rows score plus, mixed or minus - the pattern that drives the judgement.
See also