Tough question to provide a correct answer. I would say that although some cultures warmly welcome the concept of multiculuralism as the foundation of diverse society, some, on the other hand, object to it by tagging it as a New racism in which individualism is erased and collectivism embraced.
Susan Christine Mack has written: 'The policy and practice of multiculturalism' 'The policy and practice of multiculturalism (an examination of a children's day camp in the Metropolitan Toronto area)' -- subject(s): Racism, Multiculturalism, Race awareness in children, Race relations, Day camps
Jeffrey Scott Mio has written: 'Resistance to multiculturalism' -- subject(s): Mental health education, Avoidance (Psychology), Stereotypes (Social psychology), Multiculturalism, Multicultural education, Racism
The verb form of "racist" is "racism."
Yes it can, to a certain extent. If people don't mix and stay within their own groups, this can cause some people to have the wrong attitude towards other races. In truth, racism is already there, but it can be brought to the fore in certain situations.
It is a form of racism where specific cultures or a particular ethnicity are targeted.
everyone suffers from some form of racism
Joel Olson has written: 'The abolition of white democracy' -- subject(s): Democracy, Multiculturalism, Political aspects, Political aspects of Race discrimination, Political aspects of Racism, Politics and government, Race discrimination, Race identity, Race relations, Racism, Whites
It means that you are opposing people or things that are multicultural, or in a simpler form, of many cultures.
Yes. Bilingualism has a lot to do with multiculturalism.
The word is spelt "multiculturalism".
European leaders view multiculturalism as:
The word 'multiculturalism' is one word, not a compound word.multi- is a prefixcultural is an adjective-ism is a suffixA compound word is a word made of two or more individual words that merge to form a word with a meaning of its own.