Independence
Independence is important because…It promotes confidence and self-esteem as well as motivation and perseverance in school. It fosters self-reliance, allowing your child to feel they have control over their life. Independence Day is significant as it commemorates the valour and spirit of the freedom fighters who fought for the independence of the nation. The day is recognised as that of national pride and honour, with Prime Ministers / President hoisting the flag and addressing the country.
Independence
Independence is a condition of a person, nation, country, or state in which residents and population, or some portion thereof, exercise self-government, and usually sovereignty, over its territory. The opposite of independence is the status of a dependent territory.
Definition of Independence
Whether
the attainment of independence is different from revolution has long been
contested, and has often been debated over the question of violence
as legitimate means to achieving sovereignty. In general,
revolutions aim only to redistribute power with or without an element of
emancipation, such as in democratization within a state, which as such may remain unaltered. For
example, the Mexican Revolution (1917) chiefly refers to a
multi-factional conflict that eventually led to a new constitution; it has
rarely been used to refer to the armed struggle (1821) against Spain.
However, some wars of independence have been described as
revolutions, such as the ones in the United States (1783)
and Indonesia (1949), while some revolutions that were specifically
about a change in the political structure have resulted in breakaway states. Mongolia and Finland,
for example, gained their independence during the revolutions occurring
in China (1911) and Russia (1917) respectively. Causes for
a country or province wishing to seek independence are many, but most can be
summed up as a feeling of inequality compared to the dominant power. The means
can extend from intended peaceful demonstrations as in the case
of India (1947), to a violent war as in the case
of Algeria (1962). In some cases, a country may also have declared
independence, but may only be partially recognized by other countries; such
as Kosovo (2008), whose independence Serbia, from which Kosovo
has seceded, has not recognized.
Distinction
between independence and autonomy
Autonomy refers to a kind of independence which has been granted by an overseeing authority that itself still retains ultimate authority over that territory (see Devolution). A protectorate refers to an autonomous region that depends upon a larger government for its protection as an autonomous region.
Right to
independence
During
the 20th century wave of decolonization colonies gained rights to
independence through documents such as the 1960 Declaration on the
Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples, but this right
remained mostly applicable only to unfree territorial entities, such as
colonies. How much these rights apply to all people has been a crucial
point of discussion. The rights
to nationality and self-determination allow clarification.
The right of self-determination allows self-governance, as for example in
the case of indigenous peoples, but is not a right of secession, except in
extreme cases of oppression as a remedy from the oppression. Therefore
the right to secession is generally determined by the legislation
of sovereign states and independence by the capacity to be a state.
Declarations
of independence
Sometimes,
a state wishing to achieve independence from a dominating power will issue
a declaration of independence; the earliest surviving example
is Scotland's Declaration of Arbroath in 1320, with the most
recent example being Azawad's declaration of independence in 2012.
Declaring independence and attaining it, however, are quite different. A
well-known successful example is the U.S. Declaration of Independence issued
in 1776. The dates of established independence (or, less commonly, the
commencement of revolution), are typically celebrated as a
national holiday known as an Independence Day.
Historical
overview
Historically,
there have been four major periods of declaring independence:
·
from
the 1770s, beginning with the American Revolutionary War through the
1830s, when the last royalist bastions fell at the close of the Spanish
American wars of independence;
·
the
immediate aftermath of the First World War following the breakup of
the Ottoman, Austro-Hungarian, Russian, German empires;
·
1945
to circa 1979, when seventy newly independent states emerged from the
European colonial empires and the collapse of the Nazi German
Reich and the Empire of Japan;
· and the early 1990s, following the breakup of the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia.
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