Migration in Sub-State Territories with Historical-Linguistic Minorities: Main Challenges and New Perspectives

Migration is an important reality for many sub-national autonomous territories where traditional-historical groups (so-called ‘old minorities’) live such as Flanders, Catalonia, South Tyrol, Scotland, Basque Country, and Quebec. Some of these territories have attracted migrants for decades, while ot...

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Main Author: Medda-Windischer Roberta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2018-12-01
Series:Acta Universitatis Sapientiae: European and Regional Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/auseur-2018-0011
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spelling doaj-e83d0f5c37bd495bab2e9ea25b8ed64c2021-09-06T19:41:24ZengSciendoActa Universitatis Sapientiae: European and Regional Studies2068-75832018-12-01141577010.2478/auseur-2018-0011auseur-2018-0011Migration in Sub-State Territories with Historical-Linguistic Minorities: Main Challenges and New PerspectivesMedda-Windischer Roberta0PhD, LL.M., European Academy of Bolzano/Bozen (EURAC), Institute for Minority Rights (IMR)Migration is an important reality for many sub-national autonomous territories where traditional-historical groups (so-called ‘old minorities’) live such as Flanders, Catalonia, South Tyrol, Scotland, Basque Country, and Quebec. Some of these territories have attracted migrants for decades, while others have only recently experienced significant migration inflow. The presence of old minorities brings complexities to the management of migration issues. Indeed, it is acknowledged that the relationship between ‘old’ communities and the ‘new’ minority groups originating from migration (so-called ‘new minorities’) can be rather complicated. On the one hand, interests and needs of historical groups can be in contrast with those of the migrant population. On the other hand, the presence of new minorities can interfere with the relationship between the old minorities and the majority groups at the state level and also with the relationship between old minorities and the central state as well as with the policies enacted to protect the diversity of traditional groups and the way old minorities understand and define themselves. The present lecture analyses whether it is possible to reconcile the claims of historical minorities and of new groups originating from migration and whether policies that accommodate traditional minorities and migrants are allies in the pursuit of a pluralist and tolerant society.https://doi.org/10.2478/auseur-2018-0011migrationsub-state territorieshistorical-linguistic minoritiesregional citizenshipparticipation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Medda-Windischer Roberta
spellingShingle Medda-Windischer Roberta
Migration in Sub-State Territories with Historical-Linguistic Minorities: Main Challenges and New Perspectives
Acta Universitatis Sapientiae: European and Regional Studies
migration
sub-state territories
historical-linguistic minorities
regional citizenship
participation
author_facet Medda-Windischer Roberta
author_sort Medda-Windischer Roberta
title Migration in Sub-State Territories with Historical-Linguistic Minorities: Main Challenges and New Perspectives
title_short Migration in Sub-State Territories with Historical-Linguistic Minorities: Main Challenges and New Perspectives
title_full Migration in Sub-State Territories with Historical-Linguistic Minorities: Main Challenges and New Perspectives
title_fullStr Migration in Sub-State Territories with Historical-Linguistic Minorities: Main Challenges and New Perspectives
title_full_unstemmed Migration in Sub-State Territories with Historical-Linguistic Minorities: Main Challenges and New Perspectives
title_sort migration in sub-state territories with historical-linguistic minorities: main challenges and new perspectives
publisher Sciendo
series Acta Universitatis Sapientiae: European and Regional Studies
issn 2068-7583
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Migration is an important reality for many sub-national autonomous territories where traditional-historical groups (so-called ‘old minorities’) live such as Flanders, Catalonia, South Tyrol, Scotland, Basque Country, and Quebec. Some of these territories have attracted migrants for decades, while others have only recently experienced significant migration inflow. The presence of old minorities brings complexities to the management of migration issues. Indeed, it is acknowledged that the relationship between ‘old’ communities and the ‘new’ minority groups originating from migration (so-called ‘new minorities’) can be rather complicated. On the one hand, interests and needs of historical groups can be in contrast with those of the migrant population. On the other hand, the presence of new minorities can interfere with the relationship between the old minorities and the majority groups at the state level and also with the relationship between old minorities and the central state as well as with the policies enacted to protect the diversity of traditional groups and the way old minorities understand and define themselves. The present lecture analyses whether it is possible to reconcile the claims of historical minorities and of new groups originating from migration and whether policies that accommodate traditional minorities and migrants are allies in the pursuit of a pluralist and tolerant society.
topic migration
sub-state territories
historical-linguistic minorities
regional citizenship
participation
url https://doi.org/10.2478/auseur-2018-0011
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