FACTOID # 137: Sick people is Switzerland stay in hospital for longer than the people of any other nation - almost 10 days, on average. Switzerland also has the world's highest number of hospital beds per capita.
 
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Encyclopedia > Biculturalism

A policy of biculturalism is typically adopted in nations that have emerged from a history of national or ethnic conflict in which neither side has gained complete victory. This condition usually arises as a consequence of colonial settlement. The resulting conflict may be either between colonisers and indigenous people or between rival groups of colonisers. The policy influences the structures and decisions of governments to ensure that political and economic power and influence are allocated equitably between people and/or corporations identified with the opposite sides of the cultural divide.


Examples include the conflicts between Anglophone and Francophone Canadians, between Maori and Pakeha New Zealanders and between Anglophone White South Africans and Boers.


The term biculturalism was originally adopted in the Canadian context. Because biculturalism has the quality of suggesting, more or less explicitly, that only two cultures merit formal recognition, it has come to be seen as inadequately progressive when compared with the idea of multiculturalism (for which it formed a precedent).


In the context of deafness, the word biculturalism is used less controversially because the distinction (between spoken language and sign language) is commonly recognised as a genuine binary distinction transcending the distinctions between various spoken languages.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Biculturalism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (224 words)
A policy of biculturalism is typically adopted in nations that have emerged from a history of national or ethnic conflict in which neither side has gained complete victory.
Because biculturalism has the quality of suggesting, more or less explicitly, that only two cultures merit formal recognition, it has come to be seen as inadequately progressive when compared with the idea of multiculturalism (for which it formed a precedent).
In the context of deafness, the word biculturalism is used less controversially because the distinction (between spoken language and sign language) is commonly recognised as a genuine binary distinction transcending the distinctions between various spoken languages.
Part 2, Culture of Balance and Balance of Cultures: A Gendered Approach to Cross-Cultural Adaptation Process in Timothy ... (824 words)
The bicultural, or sometimes multicultural, aspect of post-colonial writing is an essential part of its nature, in which neither total assimilation into the host culture nor orthodox preservation of native culture has no place.
Bicultural individuals are comfortable and capable of belonging to both the ethnic culture and the host culture.
Biculturalism does not necessarily mean that a person switches from one culture to another depending on the context, nor does it mean that a person blends the two cultures.
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