958 resultados para Etching, French


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The framework was developed in response to feedback from partner institutions around Europe.

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Texto adaptado al currículo nacional inglés en la materia de historia, estudia los acontecimientos ocurridos en Francia desde finales del siglo XVIII hasta la caída del imperio napoleónico a principios del siglo siguiente; así como la pervivencia, hasta nuestros días, del legado de la Revolución Francesa y de la época napoleónica.

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Ayuda a los alumnos a entender la mentalidad de las personas que vivieron la Revolución Francesa. Para lo cual estudia las condiciones sociales, políticas y económicas de Francia y de sus ciudadanos en los años previos a la Revolución, durante la fase del Terror y en la era napoleónica. Cada sección se estructura como una investigación histórica, para que cada estudiante seleccione, ordene y clasifique la información y aprenda a relacionar las cuestiones clave. Su contenido se adapta al curriculum nacional inglés.

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Es un recurso para el profesor basado en el libro del alumno, que le ayuda a planificar el estudio. Utiliza preguntas de carácter muy general, para dar a los estudiantes una visión de conjunto y en profundidad de los acontecimientos históricos.

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France is known for being a champion of individual rights as well as for its overt hostility to any form of group rights. Linguistic pluralism in the public sphere is rejected for fear of babelization and Balkanization of the country. Over recent decades the Conseil Constitutionnel (CC) has, together with the Conseil d’État, remained arguably the strongest defender of this Jacobin ideal in France. In this article, I will discuss the role of France’s restrictive language policy through the prism of the CC’s jurisprudence. Overall, I will argue that the CC made reference to the (Jacobin) state-nation concept, a concept that is discussed in the first part of the paper, in order to fight the revival of regional languages in France over recent decades. The clause making French the official language in 1992 was functional to this policy. The intriguing aspect is that in France the CC managed to standardise France’s policy vis-à-vis regional and minority languages through its jurisprudence; an issue discussed in the second part of the paper. But in those regions with a stronger tradition of identity, particularly in the French overseas territories, the third part of the paper argues, normative reality has increasingly become under pressure. Therefore, a discrepancy between the ‘law in courts’ and the compliance with these decisions (‘law in action’) has been emerging over recent years. Amid some signs of opening of France to minorities, this contradiction delineates a trend that might well continue in future.