Diversité légitime et illégitime – la Suisse et ses minorités

Switzerland has made linguistic diversity one of the pillars of its national unity. More than being «united in diversity», the country is united by the promotion of its differences. From a philosophical point of view, considering native diversity as a source of wealth to be preserved may seem biased...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sabine Choquet
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: L’Harmattan 2019-02-01
Series:Droit et Cultures
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/droitcultures/5354
id doaj-f5131a4d5f1d4fbfbe02d5933340e960
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f5131a4d5f1d4fbfbe02d5933340e9602020-11-25T01:09:31ZfraL’HarmattanDroit et Cultures0247-97882109-94212019-02-0177147168Diversité légitime et illégitime – la Suisse et ses minoritésSabine ChoquetSwitzerland has made linguistic diversity one of the pillars of its national unity. More than being «united in diversity», the country is united by the promotion of its differences. From a philosophical point of view, considering native diversity as a source of wealth to be preserved may seem biased in favour of a certain concept of the «good life». By the principle of territoriality, the Confederation implicitly chooses to favour the preservation of groups and their collective intention over the individual liberty to choose one’s language. This choice is understood in reference to the political form taken by the Swiss nation, a «consociation» (Walzer, 1998). Differing from the nation state, the aim of a consociation is to preserve languages and cultures of a nation’s native groups, even the smallest minorities. However, is the consociation model a more tolerant model than the nation state, which privileges the majority culture? Not necessarily, because the political mechanisms aimed at preserving national minorities result in the promotion of cultural assimilation among immigrant populations. Thus, what initially appeared as a policy to promote diversity turns out to be based on a clear demarcation between legitimate differences, that should be preserved, and those that should be made to disappear.http://journals.openedition.org/droitcultures/5354ConsociationSwitzerlandCanadaPreservationCultureLanguage
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sabine Choquet
spellingShingle Sabine Choquet
Diversité légitime et illégitime – la Suisse et ses minorités
Droit et Cultures
Consociation
Switzerland
Canada
Preservation
Culture
Language
author_facet Sabine Choquet
author_sort Sabine Choquet
title Diversité légitime et illégitime – la Suisse et ses minorités
title_short Diversité légitime et illégitime – la Suisse et ses minorités
title_full Diversité légitime et illégitime – la Suisse et ses minorités
title_fullStr Diversité légitime et illégitime – la Suisse et ses minorités
title_full_unstemmed Diversité légitime et illégitime – la Suisse et ses minorités
title_sort diversité légitime et illégitime – la suisse et ses minorités
publisher L’Harmattan
series Droit et Cultures
issn 0247-9788
2109-9421
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Switzerland has made linguistic diversity one of the pillars of its national unity. More than being «united in diversity», the country is united by the promotion of its differences. From a philosophical point of view, considering native diversity as a source of wealth to be preserved may seem biased in favour of a certain concept of the «good life». By the principle of territoriality, the Confederation implicitly chooses to favour the preservation of groups and their collective intention over the individual liberty to choose one’s language. This choice is understood in reference to the political form taken by the Swiss nation, a «consociation» (Walzer, 1998). Differing from the nation state, the aim of a consociation is to preserve languages and cultures of a nation’s native groups, even the smallest minorities. However, is the consociation model a more tolerant model than the nation state, which privileges the majority culture? Not necessarily, because the political mechanisms aimed at preserving national minorities result in the promotion of cultural assimilation among immigrant populations. Thus, what initially appeared as a policy to promote diversity turns out to be based on a clear demarcation between legitimate differences, that should be preserved, and those that should be made to disappear.
topic Consociation
Switzerland
Canada
Preservation
Culture
Language
url http://journals.openedition.org/droitcultures/5354
work_keys_str_mv AT sabinechoquet diversitelegitimeetillegitimelasuisseetsesminorites
_version_ 1725178318941061120