Equality versus Fraternity? Rethinking France and its Minorities


Autoria(s): Gilbert, Jérémie
Data(s)

12/07/2016

Resumo

The relationship between France and its minorities is complex. Recent events including the 2015 terrorist attacks, the prohibition on wearing religious symbols in public, or the 2005 riots, have been perceived as symbols of great tension in French society when its comes to its minorities.2 Indeed the ten-year anniversary of the riots prompted reporting that nothing had changed in the intervening period in the structures of inequality that caused them,3 while in January 2015, the French Prime Minister Manuel Valls declared that the country was facing a “territorial, ethnic and social apartheid”.4 This statement from the Prime Minister seems to be at odds with the overall policy of rejecting any targeted policies or laws to protect minorities in France. As a tradition France is against minority rights. French authorities have consistently rejected the use of the term ‘minorities’, and have banned any form of special measures for national, racial, ethnic, religious or linguistic groups.5

Formato

text

Identificador

http://roar.uel.ac.uk/5156/1/Equality%20versus%20Fraternity.pdf

Gilbert, Jérémie (2016) ‘Equality versus Fraternity? Rethinking France and its Minorities’, International Journal of Constitutional Law, In Press.

Publicador

Oxford University Press

Relação

http://roar.uel.ac.uk/5156/

Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed