The article focuses on rise of nationalism and xenophobia in Slovenia. It starts by considering the issue of unrecognized minorities in Slovenia (former Yugoslavia nations) that have no minority rights, despite being large groups, as many international organizations for the protection of minorities have pointed out. A particular issue in this relation for Slovenia is the ‘Erased’ – the individuals who did not acquire Slovenian citizenship when Slovenia seceded from federal Yugoslavia – and despite the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) decision, the Slovenian state has still not recognized their rights, which were violated in the post-independence period. The article also examines two other minorities in Slovenia, the Jews and the Roma. The article finds Slovenia to be a closed, non-globalised society which, in spite of its constitutional declaration to protect the rights of minorities and other national communities, is seeking to retain a politically and culturally homogeneous nation state.
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December 2011
Research Article|
November 04 2011
Rise of xenophobic nationalism in Europe: A case of Slovenia
Alenka Kuhelj
Alenka Kuhelj
Faculty of Administration, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
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Communist and Post-Communist Studies (2011) 44 (4): 271–282.
Citation
Alenka Kuhelj; Rise of xenophobic nationalism in Europe: A case of Slovenia. Communist and Post-Communist Studies 1 December 2011; 44 (4): 271–282. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.postcomstud.2011.10.003
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