MAINTENANCE EN COURS / SITE UNDER MAINTENANCE

Une opération de maintenance est en cours: les résultats de recherches et les exportations peuvent être incohérent.
Site under maintenance: search & exportation results could be inconsistent.
 

Belgium: Towards the Breakdown of a Nation-State in the Heart ofEurope?

De Winter, Lieven;Baudewyns, Pierre
(2009) Nationalism & Ethnic Politics — Vol. 15, n° 3-4, p. 280-304 (2009)

Files

No attached file found for this publication.

Details

Authors
Abstract
Due to reversal of the center-periphery cleavage between Flemish and Francophones by the 1960s, the Belgian unitary state was transformed gradually into a fully fledged federal state. In spite of this empowerment of the regions and communities, the aftermath of the June 2007 general elections showed that Belgium was moving into a crucial, and maybe final, phase of its community conflict. Conflicts over socioeconomic autonomy have replaced the original language issues, essentially opposing on the one hand the Francophones in Wallonia and Brussels unanimously defending the institutional status quo of the current federal state, and on the other hand most Flemish political elites calling for radical autonomy, and some even for independence. In the near future, undoubtedly more policy competences will be devolved, but this “lighter but fitter Belgium” outcome may not satisfy Flemish elites.
Affiliations

Citations

De Winter, L., & Baudewyns, P. (2009). Belgium: Towards the Breakdown of a Nation-State in the Heart ofEurope? Nationalism & Ethnic Politics, 15(3-4), 280-304. https://doi.org/10.1080/13537110903358689 (Original work published 2009)