Compartir
Título
Religions, Migrations and Minorities
Otros títulos
Coexistence & conflicts, difference & similarities in religions
Autor(es)
Assunto
IERS
Lifelong Learning Programme
religious studies
estudio de las religiones
intercultural education
educación intercultural
cultural diversity
diversidad cultural
religious diversity
diversidad religiosa
religions
religiones
migrations
migraciones
minorities
minorías
Clasificación UNESCO
58 Pedagogía
5506.21 Historia de las religiones
Fecha de publicación
2014-12
Editor
Intercultural Education through Religious Studies (IERS)
Resumen
Maria Rizzuto. Ca' Foscari University of Venice (Italy): "Religions play an important role in the transmission of the identity of migrant minorities in diasporic contexts. The English word migration derives from the Latin verb migrare, meaning “to move from one place to another”. The human migration is the permanent change of residence by an individual or group for different motivations (see section 3). This concept is related to the concept of diaspora. The concept of diaspora has long been used to refer to the Greeks in the Hellenic world and to the Jews after the fall of Jerusalem in the early 6th century BC. Beginning in the 1950s and 1960s, scholars began to use it with reference to the African diaspora, and the use of the term was extended further in the following decades. The migrant groups may constitute a minority in the place of arrival: minority, a culturally, ethnically, religious distinct group that coexists but are subordinate to a more dominant group."
URI
http://iers.grial.eu/modules/religions-migrations-minorities/rmmpre.html
http://hdl.handle.net/10366/125195
http://hdl.handle.net/10366/125195
Aparece en las colecciones