ethnization

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

ethno- +‎ -ization

Noun[edit]

ethnization (uncountable)

  1. The act or process of making a group into, or of becoming as a group, an ethnicity or distinct people.
    • 1998, Ethnologia Europaea, volumes 27-29, page 148:
      This ethnization observed by Bukow and Llaryora in the conceptualization of newly immigrated minorities can also be observed with regard to "resident" minorities like the Sorbs.
    • 2013, Education for Democratic Citizenship, →ISBN, page 106:
      The minority groups show no strong tendency towards ethnization; the formation of groups is hardly used as an instrument to gain a better position in the labor market, the housing market, or education, if at all.

Quotations[edit]

  • 1991, Eliezer Ben-Rafael, Stephen Sharot, Ethnicity, Religion and Class in Israeli Society, →ISBN, page 222:
    They expected the Middle Eastern "ethnics” to "modernize" and to adopt their ”non-ethnic” culture, but it was precisely this stance that contributed to the ethnization of Middle Eastern Israelis and their perception of the Ashkenazi establishment as a factor to be resisted.
  • 2011, Nikolai Genov, Global Trends and Regional Development, →ISBN:
    The concept of reflexive ethnization (Bös 1997; Patterson 1983) can be used to decompose different aspects of inequality. From a systematic point ofview, reflexive ethnization is a special form of ethnogenesis.
  • 1998, Georg Stauth, Islam, Motor Or Challenge of Modernity, →ISBN, page 195:
    The foreign-led ethnization of Islamic culture reached new heights in Bosnia. During the war, an Islamic-sounding name entered in the bearer's passport was often all it took for him to be executed on the spot by an opposing party.

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Related terms[edit]