Cultural Minority Rights for Immigrants
- 1 January 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in International Migration Review
- Vol. 30 (1) , 203-250
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2547468
Abstract
This paper argues that cultural minorities enjoy a basic right to recognition and rejects the idea that migrants implicitly renounce their cultural claims when they leave their countries of origin, when they enter the receiving society, or when they may return. Need for cultural recognition arises from the ''ethnicization'' of immigrant minorities. A catalog of minority rights provides a reference list for assessing the particular cultural rights of immigrant minorities. They can generally claim rights which recognize a multicultural transformation of receiving societies (equality, liberty, protection from individual discrimination, and public resources for cultural reproduction). However, most immigrants cannot reasonably claim rights derived from historic discrimination, or from collective autonomy within a federation of potentially separate polities.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Thick-Skinned Liberalism: Redefining CivilityAmerican Political Science Review, 1995