Carbonneau, Jean-Rémi: The Convergent Development of the State and the Ethnolinguistic Majorities in France, Germany, Canada and Spain
Lětopis Abstract 2016 1: Carbonneau, Jean-Rémi: The Convergent Development of the State and the Ethnolinguistic Majorities in France,
Germany, Canada and Spain
Civic and ethnic nationalisms are merely abstract theoretical models that help us to understand the actions, reactions and claims of ethnolinguistic
groups against the background of identity conflicts in a multinational state rather than fixed givens to describe either majority or minority groups
in an essentialist fashion. This article deals with the relation between these two ideal types and the grey area between them. It questions the civic
foundations of four Western nation-states that are commonly seen as modern archetypes of popular sovereignty, and aims to demonstrate the convergence
of state institutions with the interests of ethnolinguistic majorities in their respective nation-building processes. The article addresses first the
theoretical underpinning of the civic-ethnic debate in political science, while special attention will be given to unequal power relationships between
majorities and minorities. It goes on to talk about the practical consequences of this relationship for historical minorities in different state
contexts: first in the French unitary state, then in Germany, Canada and Spain, three countries with distinctive federal structures, although Germany
significantly differs from the other two, since the federal state structure never played a role in empowering national minorities, as the case of the
Lusatian Sorbs illustrates. Nevertheless, as in France and Germany, national majorities’ claims to hegemony remain one of the main challenges for
historical minorities in Canada and Spain.
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