000 01952nam a22002297a 4500
008 221219t2022 sp |||||s|||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _cES-MaBCM
100 1 _927174
_aLópez Castillo, Antonio
245 1 0 _aMinority languages in Spain
_b: recognition, promotion and some conflicts
_cAntonio López Castillo, Alberto López-Basaguren
_h[Recurso electrónico]
260 _aMadrid
_b : Forum of Federations
_c , 2022
300 _a25 p.
490 _aOccasional Paper
_v62
504 _aBibliografía: p. 18-22
520 _aLanguage is a highly significant marker of individual and collective identities. It often provides an impulse for national or community affirmation and claims to self-government. Provisions to recognize and accommodate linguistic differences can be particularly salient in federations, many of which have highly diverse populations. Indeed, in quite a few cases linguistic diversity was one of the key reasons why federalism was central to a country’s founding framework or the result of its constitutional evolution. Several federal countries have designated more than one language as official (or national) languages in the federal constitution and/or legislation. In turn, the constituent units (states, provinces, etc.) may accord a similar status to one or more languages. The different designations are not merely symbolic: they usually require or lead to policies, programs and other measures to govern language use. In some nonfederal states where more than one language is spoken, a measure of authority over language policy has sometimes been devolved to regional governments (or the equivalent).
650 0 _aLengua oficial
650 7 _aGrupo lingüístico
_2
650 7 _aMultilingüismo
_2
651 4 _aEspaña
_9115342
856 _uhttps://mpr.bage.es/cgi-bin/koha/opac-retrieve-file.pl?id=17f79803996d68a47fccd600ba41ea0e
_yDESCARGAR DOCUMENTO
942 _cLE
999 _c223429
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