Ethnicity and Politics in Bulgaria and IsraelJon Anson Avebury, 1993 - 259 страници Bulgaria and Israel are two small countries with a surprising amount in common. Both are ethnically distinct from their neighbours; both have sizeable minority populations bearing a cultural affinity with a large and potentially threatening neighbour; both have internal ethnic schisms which are reinforced by a considerable degree of occupational and residential segregation, and both countries are undergoing important changes as a result of the break-up of the Soviet Bloc and the realignment of international politics. |
Съдържание
Introduction | 1 |
Jon Anson | 13 |
Victor Azarya | 29 |
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agriculture analysis anthroponymic antisemitism areas attitudes Aviv behaviour Bulgarian Academy Bulgarian Communist Party Bulgarian Jews Bulgarian Socialist Party Bulgarian society Bulgarian Turks central centre coexistence Communist crisis democracy democratic development towns discussion elections Elka Todorova environmental Ethiopian ethnic expressed Gotse Delchev groups Haifa Hebrew Histadruth immigrants income individual inequality Institute of Sociology interest Israel Israeli Israeli Arabs Jerusalem Jewish Jewish and Arab Jews of Bulgaria Kibbutz kibbutzim Knesset Konstantinov labour living major minority moshav occupational offender rates orientation participation particular Percent periphery political culture political parties political power Pomaks population present problems professional questions regions relations religious responses risks schools sectors situation social integration Socialist sociologists Sociology Sofia status structure survey Table teaching tensions threat Todorova trust Turkish unemployment University violent crime workers workshop