Minorities at War
portes grátis
Minorities at War
Cultural Identity and Resilience in Ukraine
Muratova, Elmira; Zasanska, Nadia
Taylor & Francis Ltd
11/2024
298
Dura
9781032730639
Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição
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Foreword: exploring how and why minorities shape the majority. 1. Introduction. Ethno-cultural minority identities at war in Ukraine and beyond. PART I: Minority politics, language, and identity during the war. 2. National minorities in Ukraine: contextualizing challenges and searching for policy solutions. 3. Majority-minority relations in Ukraine: state minority politics in a changed security context. PART II: Collective memory and minorities' coping strategies. 4. Collective memory, Islam, and coping strategies of Crimean Tatars in occupied Crimea. 5. Public discourses connected to the Russian war in Ukraine: the representation of Jewish communities. 6. Shia Muslims of Ukraine during the Russian invasion. PART III: Mobilization, resilience, and humanitarianism 7. Muslim organizations in Ukraine and the challenges of wartime: moderation, mobilization, and resilience. 8. Mobilizing Christian emotions: everyday ethnicity and resiliency in a Transcarpathian Hungarian NGO. 9. The Ukrainian national minority and forced migrants in Poland: the case of Przemysl. 10. Going beyond regional: the Greek Catholic Church as a communicator of dignity during the Russo-Ukrainian war. PART IV: Displacement and identity preservation during the war. 11. Exodus of the Hungarian minority from Ukraine? War-induced ethnic dynamics in the Ukrainian-Hungarian border region. 12. Meskhetian/Ahiska Turks in time of uncertainty: changes in civic, ethnic, and religious identification. 13. Ukrainian Roma facing the challenges of the Russian-Ukrainian war and displacement. 14. Concluding remarks.
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Ukraine;War;Minorities;Cultural Identity;Resilience
Foreword: exploring how and why minorities shape the majority. 1. Introduction. Ethno-cultural minority identities at war in Ukraine and beyond. PART I: Minority politics, language, and identity during the war. 2. National minorities in Ukraine: contextualizing challenges and searching for policy solutions. 3. Majority-minority relations in Ukraine: state minority politics in a changed security context. PART II: Collective memory and minorities' coping strategies. 4. Collective memory, Islam, and coping strategies of Crimean Tatars in occupied Crimea. 5. Public discourses connected to the Russian war in Ukraine: the representation of Jewish communities. 6. Shia Muslims of Ukraine during the Russian invasion. PART III: Mobilization, resilience, and humanitarianism 7. Muslim organizations in Ukraine and the challenges of wartime: moderation, mobilization, and resilience. 8. Mobilizing Christian emotions: everyday ethnicity and resiliency in a Transcarpathian Hungarian NGO. 9. The Ukrainian national minority and forced migrants in Poland: the case of Przemysl. 10. Going beyond regional: the Greek Catholic Church as a communicator of dignity during the Russo-Ukrainian war. PART IV: Displacement and identity preservation during the war. 11. Exodus of the Hungarian minority from Ukraine? War-induced ethnic dynamics in the Ukrainian-Hungarian border region. 12. Meskhetian/Ahiska Turks in time of uncertainty: changes in civic, ethnic, and religious identification. 13. Ukrainian Roma facing the challenges of the Russian-Ukrainian war and displacement. 14. Concluding remarks.
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.