Synopsis
The increasingly
multicultural fabric of modern societies has given rise
to many new issues and conflicts, as ethnic and national
minorities demand recognition and support for their cultural
identity.
This
book presents a new conception of the rights and status
of minority cultures. It argues that certain "collective
rights" of minority cultures are consistent with
liberal democratic principles, and that standard liberal
objections to such rights can be answered. However, the
author emphasizes that no single formula can be applied
to all groups, and that the needs and aspirations of immigrants
are very different from those of indigenous peoples and
national minorities.
He
looks at issues such as language rights, group representation,
religious education, federalism, and secession--issues
central to an understanding of multicultural politics,
but which have been neglected in contemporary liberal
theory. Scholars of political theory and philosophy, as
well as the general reader, will find this work to be
the most comprehensive analysis to date of this crucial
political issue.