Following Crimea’s incorporation into Russia in March 2014, the Crimean parliament adopted a new constitution granting official status to Russian, Ukrainian and Crimean Tatar. Despite the official multi-ethnicity and multilingualism of Crimea now constitutionally acknowledged, however, there is reason to believe that the formally proclaimed equality of the three languages has not translated into equality in practice. Among the areas where the inequality in language promotion and support is most noticeable, language education policy and language use in public place play a special role.
Univertity of Insubria, Italy - ORCID: 0000-0001-5790-990X
Titolo del capitolo
Changes and Developments in the Linguistic Landscape of Present-Day Crimea
Autori
Paola Bocale
Lingua
Italian
DOI
10.36253/978-88-6453-328-5.04
Opera sottoposta a peer review
Anno di pubblicazione
2016
Copyright
© 2016 Author(s)
Licenza d'uso
Licenza dei metadati
Titolo del libro
Le lingue slave tra struttura e uso
Curatori
Valentina Benigni, Lucyna Gebert, Julija Nikolaeva
Opera sottoposta a peer review
Numero di pagine
346
Anno di pubblicazione
2016
Copyright
© 2016 Author(s)
Licenza d'uso
Licenza dei metadati
Editore
Firenze University Press
DOI
10.36253/978-88-6453-328-5
ISBN Print
978-88-6453-327-8
eISBN (pdf)
978-88-6453-328-5
eISBN (xml)
978-88-9273-230-8
Collana
Biblioteca di Studi Slavistici
ISSN della collana
2612-7687
e-ISSN della collana
2612-7679