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Minorities and majorities in the Middle East

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

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Extract

Minority and majority are correlative terms: to say the one necessarily implies the other.

The notion of minority and majority has for a long time now been part of the Western political vocabulary. How did this happen ? It is a natural question to ask since neither the Latin words from which they are derived, i.e., minor and maior, nor their particular derivations in various European languages originally had a political bearing or implication. In English (and French) for instance minority and majority indicated simply the age of a person, having regard to issues of legal competence. A minor could not act in his own behalf. In due coursethe minor will be able so to act, and we then say that he has attained his majority.

Type
Tending the Roots: Nationalism and Populism
Copyright
Copyright © Archives Européenes de Sociology 1984

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