Silesians, according to the number of declarations collected during the 2002 and 2011 censuses, are the most numerous ethnic minority in Poland. Since the early 1990s, they have been demanding state recognition and legal protection. Silesian leaders have chosen to pursue these aspirations through legal channels. They have established organizations that unite representatives of Silesians. They have contributed to draft bills to the Polish parliament aimed at having Silesian recognized as a regional language, and a citizens' initiative calling for an amendment to the law on national minorities proposing the addition of the Silesian minority to the list of ethnic minorities. These efforts have met with opposition from the state, which treats S...
Poland has a centuries long tradition of being a tolerant country, manifested as well by the symboli...
Languages are made and unmade, as nations are. The vagaries of history and politics that create the ...
The text comprises considerations on the changes in the national identification of Silesians after W...
This article concerns identity politics in the broader, theoretical perspective. The author discusse...
Upper Silesia in terms of ethnicity is a typical example of a historical region in Europe, but in fa...
The main subjects of work are: the Upper Silesians as a ethnical minority and their autonomical atte...
A study such as the national census can be examined form a number of perspectives. While it can be c...
Poland was established as a nation-state in 1918. The state’s administration embarked on the policy ...
During Poland's communist period, Lemkos-Ruthenian highlanders whose indigenous territory is in the ...
The emergence of a German minority in the western part of Śląsk Górny (Upper Silesia, Opolskie Regio...
The fall of communism in 1989 heralded the advent of democracy and individual freedoms in the former...
In the article, the author describes an evaluation regarding the identity of the indigenous populati...
The Silesians are an ethnic or national group that coalesced in the nineteenth century. During the s...
According to the National Census of Population and Housing 2011, Silesians are the second largest na...
This article traces changes in Polish administrative approaches toward indigenous Upper Silesians in...
Poland has a centuries long tradition of being a tolerant country, manifested as well by the symboli...
Languages are made and unmade, as nations are. The vagaries of history and politics that create the ...
The text comprises considerations on the changes in the national identification of Silesians after W...
This article concerns identity politics in the broader, theoretical perspective. The author discusse...
Upper Silesia in terms of ethnicity is a typical example of a historical region in Europe, but in fa...
The main subjects of work are: the Upper Silesians as a ethnical minority and their autonomical atte...
A study such as the national census can be examined form a number of perspectives. While it can be c...
Poland was established as a nation-state in 1918. The state’s administration embarked on the policy ...
During Poland's communist period, Lemkos-Ruthenian highlanders whose indigenous territory is in the ...
The emergence of a German minority in the western part of Śląsk Górny (Upper Silesia, Opolskie Regio...
The fall of communism in 1989 heralded the advent of democracy and individual freedoms in the former...
In the article, the author describes an evaluation regarding the identity of the indigenous populati...
The Silesians are an ethnic or national group that coalesced in the nineteenth century. During the s...
According to the National Census of Population and Housing 2011, Silesians are the second largest na...
This article traces changes in Polish administrative approaches toward indigenous Upper Silesians in...
Poland has a centuries long tradition of being a tolerant country, manifested as well by the symboli...
Languages are made and unmade, as nations are. The vagaries of history and politics that create the ...
The text comprises considerations on the changes in the national identification of Silesians after W...