Homophobia, culture shock, single parenthood and cultural assimilation are among the themes treated lightly. |
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Our indigenous peoples of the comarcas are an example of resistance to mistreatment at the hands of nature and cultural assimilation. |
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Migration and military expeditions led to the cultural assimilation of the south. |
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Strong ethnolinguistic vitality ensures that the ethnolinguistic and cultural community will remain a distinct, active entity, whereas weak ethnolinguistic vitality is associated with linguistic and cultural assimilation. |
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Politicians, chief among them senior official Duncan Campbell Scott, were convinced that education would provide the foundation for cultural assimilation. |
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In the 19th century, the Europeans introduced what is possibly the most devastating tool of cultural assimilation ever implemented: the establishment of Indian residential schools. |
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As well as the economic disparities between countries, expectations of cultural assimilation across the continent cause resentment and the danger of new division. |
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Without culture-based intervention, cultural assimilation continues. |
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Yet, to fulfil its function in combating discrimination, education may actually result in cultural assimilation that is generally viewed negatively by members of minorities or indigenous peoples. |
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On this account, patriotism is associated with the exclusive attachment to one's own culture and thus stands in opposition to cosmopolitanism and cultural assimilation. |
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Or perhaps the book is about cultural assimilation. |
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Whenever and wherever the civic dimension of the state is developed at the price of the cultural assimilation and uniformisation, democracy is in deficit. |
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Courses were offered in languages, team-building, communication, leadership, project management, presentation, cultural assimilation and computer software. |
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Regardless of the precise number of children involved, Aboriginal people across the country have paid a high price, both individually and collectively, for the government's misguided experiment in cultural assimilation. |
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Globalisation has increased the potential for such dislocation, as well as the problems of cultural assimilation, disagreement and the sense of the exotic or foreign that may result. |
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Still, due to the cultural assimilation of the Sami people that had occurred in the four countries over the centuries, population estimates are difficult to measure precisely. |
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Negative responses to minorities within the nation state have ranged from cultural assimilation enforced by the state, to expulsion, persecution, violence, and extermination. |
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Cultural assimilation is the process by which a person's or group's culture come to resemble those of another group. |
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Cultural assimilation may involve either a quick or gradual change depending on circumstances of the group. |
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Cultural assimilation can happen either spontaneously or forcibly. |
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