Les destins divergents des régionalismes flamands et francophones : une perspective historique

The tensions between French-speaking and Dutch-speaking communities in Belgium about the regionalization of federal competences are not new and have to be understood in the long history of regionalism. This article tells the history and the geography of regional waves in Belgium. We will in particul...

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Main Authors: Geoffrey Pion, Gilles Van Hamme
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Pôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information Géographique 2011-04-01
Series:EchoGéo
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/12291
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spelling doaj-45be1af5f0084288a252d0a3088afc6b2021-01-02T16:17:09ZfraPôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information GéographiqueEchoGéo1963-11972011-04-011510.4000/echogeo.12291Les destins divergents des régionalismes flamands et francophones : une perspective historiqueGeoffrey PionGilles Van HammeThe tensions between French-speaking and Dutch-speaking communities in Belgium about the regionalization of federal competences are not new and have to be understood in the long history of regionalism. This article tells the history and the geography of regional waves in Belgium. We will in particular show how these successive regionalist fevers have progressively reshaped the Belgian Central State into a federal State where regions gain in competences over the time. The main hypothesis is that regionalist parties have gone through temporary electoral successes (1919-21, 1936, 1965-77, 2009-?), followed by long period of decline as soon as the regionalist claims of the opinion were satisfied. The next wave of regionalism relies thus on the new claims to deepen the regionalisation of the Belgian State. In this framework, we will insist on the growing support for regionalist parties in the Flemish part of the country since the eighties, in contrast with the quasi absence of Walloon regionalist parties in the recent years. We also show that the geography of regionalist parties have considerably evolved over the time, with the exception of Antwerp which has remained at the heart of most Flemish regionalist parties.http://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/12291Belgiumelectoral geographyFlemish movementregionalism
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Geoffrey Pion
Gilles Van Hamme
spellingShingle Geoffrey Pion
Gilles Van Hamme
Les destins divergents des régionalismes flamands et francophones : une perspective historique
EchoGéo
Belgium
electoral geography
Flemish movement
regionalism
author_facet Geoffrey Pion
Gilles Van Hamme
author_sort Geoffrey Pion
title Les destins divergents des régionalismes flamands et francophones : une perspective historique
title_short Les destins divergents des régionalismes flamands et francophones : une perspective historique
title_full Les destins divergents des régionalismes flamands et francophones : une perspective historique
title_fullStr Les destins divergents des régionalismes flamands et francophones : une perspective historique
title_full_unstemmed Les destins divergents des régionalismes flamands et francophones : une perspective historique
title_sort les destins divergents des régionalismes flamands et francophones : une perspective historique
publisher Pôle de Recherche pour l'Organisation et la diffusion de l'Information Géographique
series EchoGéo
issn 1963-1197
publishDate 2011-04-01
description The tensions between French-speaking and Dutch-speaking communities in Belgium about the regionalization of federal competences are not new and have to be understood in the long history of regionalism. This article tells the history and the geography of regional waves in Belgium. We will in particular show how these successive regionalist fevers have progressively reshaped the Belgian Central State into a federal State where regions gain in competences over the time. The main hypothesis is that regionalist parties have gone through temporary electoral successes (1919-21, 1936, 1965-77, 2009-?), followed by long period of decline as soon as the regionalist claims of the opinion were satisfied. The next wave of regionalism relies thus on the new claims to deepen the regionalisation of the Belgian State. In this framework, we will insist on the growing support for regionalist parties in the Flemish part of the country since the eighties, in contrast with the quasi absence of Walloon regionalist parties in the recent years. We also show that the geography of regionalist parties have considerably evolved over the time, with the exception of Antwerp which has remained at the heart of most Flemish regionalist parties.
topic Belgium
electoral geography
Flemish movement
regionalism
url http://journals.openedition.org/echogeo/12291
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