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1
dialÄktik : deutschschweizer Literatur zwischen Mundart und Hochsprache
Aeberhard, Simon (Hrsg.). - Zürich : Chronos, 2014
IDS Mannheim
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2
Plädoyer für eine gelebte Mehrsprachigkeit : die Sprachen im Räderwerk der Politik in der mehrsprachigen Schweiz und im europäischen Ausland
Arquint, Romedi. - Zürich : Verl. Neue Zürcher Zeitung, 2014
IDS Mannheim
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3
Die Schweizer Toponyme "Gals"/"Chules", "Tschugg", "La Chaux" (Cossonay), "Les Chumereux" : verschiedene romanische Ergebnisse des (vor-)lateinischen Stammes "cal-", mit und ohne Einfluss des Deutschen
In: Beiträge zur Namenforschung. - Heidelberg : Winter 49 (2014) 2, 221-236
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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4
Plädoyer für eine gelebte Mehrsprachigkeit : die Sprachen im Räderwerk der Politik in der mehrsprachigen Schweiz und im europäischen Ausland
Arquint, Romedi. - Zürich : Verl. Neue Zürcher Zeitung, 2014
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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5
Dialekt in Kontakt mit Immigrantensprachen: der Fall des Schweizerdeutschen
In: Alemannische Dialektologie: Dialekte im Kontakt Beiträge zur 17. Arbeitstagung für alemannische Dialektologie in Straßburg vom 26.–28.10.2011 (2014)
IDS Bibliografie zur deutschen Grammatik
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6
Static spatial descriptions in five Germanic languages
In: Language sciences (2014)
IDS Bibliografie zur deutschen Grammatik
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7
Zur Struktur des Verbalkomplexes im Zürichdeutschen
In: Enerugeia (2014) 39, 33-53
IDS Bibliografie zur deutschen Grammatik
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8
Terminologische Variation in der Rechts- und Verwaltungssprache: Deutschland - Österreich - Schweiz
Wissik, Tanja. - Berlin : Frank & Timme, 2014
IDS Bibliografie zur deutschen Grammatik
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9
Le parler "jeune" en Suisse romande : quelles perceptions?
Singy, Pascal. - Lausanne : Univ., 2014
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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10
Sprachliche Werturteile von Laien : eine sozio-kognitive Analyse
Cuonz, Christina. - Tübingen : Francke, 2014
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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11
The acquisition of sociolinguistic competence in a lingua franca context
Durham, Mercedes. - Bristol [u.a.] : Multilingual Matters, 2014
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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12
Sprachliche Werturteile von Laien : eine sozio-kognitive Analyse
Cuonz, Christina. - Tübingen : Francke, 2014
DNB Subject Category Language
IDS Mannheim
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13
Die Flur- und Siedlungsnamen der Amtei Olten-Gösgen
Blaser, Heidi; Reber, Jacqueline (Hrsg.). - Basel : Schwabe, 2014
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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14
SWIP 3 : Swiss workshop in prosody proceedings ; actes des journées Genève septembre 2014
Auchlin, Antoine. - Genève : Dép., 2014
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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15
Kulturelle Schlüsselbegriffe der Schweiz im öffentlichen Diskurs : eine kultursemantische Untersuchung
Madej, Jadwiga. - Frankfurt am Main : Lang-Ed., 2014
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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16
Integration durch Sprache - die Sprache der Integration : eine kritische Diskursanalyse zur Rolle der Sprache in der Schweizer und Basler Integrationspolitik 1998 - 2008
Flubacher, Mi-Cha. - Göttingen [u.a.] : V & R Unipress, Vienna Univ. Press, c 2014
DNB Subject Category Language
IDS Mannheim
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17
Kulturelle Schlüsselbegriffe der Schweiz im öffentlichen Diskurs : eine kultursemantische Untersuchung
Madej, Jadwiga. - Frankfurt am Main ; Bern ; Wien [u.a.] : Lang-Ed., 2014
DNB Subject Category Language
IDS Mannheim
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18
Ethnic Visibility, Context, and Xenophobia: A European Perspective
Shenasi Azari, Shabnam. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2014
In: Shenasi Azari, Shabnam. (2014). Ethnic Visibility, Context, and Xenophobia: A European Perspective. UCLA: Sociology 0867. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/5h2835n1 (2014)
BASE
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19
Ethnic Visibility, Context, and Xenophobia: A European Perspective
Shenasi Azari, Shabnam. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2014
Abstract: The purpose of this study is to answer the following overarching question: how does ethnic diversity among immigrant and native populations impact xenophobia? Many studies answer this question by examining the effects of relative immigrant group size. Instead, I argue that group size increases xenophobia when immigrants are ethnically visible, crossing salient linguistic, religious, or racial boundaries. In three investigations I look at the effects of the following factors on xenophobia: ethnic diversity in the immigrant population, ethnic diversity in the broader society, and being cultural marginal. Analyzing multilevel models using cross–national data from the European Social Survey (ESS), I examine the effects of regional and national contexts of immigrant visibility on xenophobia. I define xenophobia as the perception of immigrant threat. I also test the hypothesis that average xenophobia is higher among individuals living in more ethnically diverse countries. In the second investigation, I reexamine immigrant visibility, this time using Swiss ESS data to compare across municipalities. I also consider the effects of living adjacent to rather than in an immigrant–rich community. In a final investigation, I again analyze cross–national ESS data to determine the effects of being different from the cultural majority on xenophobia. I find that xenophobia is higher among individuals living in more religiously diverse countries. Also, for those living in communities with few to no immigrants, the presence of immigrants in surrounding areas amplifies xenophobia. Comparing across countries and regions within those countries, I find that the size of the ethnically visible population does not affect xenophobia. However, immigrant visibility does increase xenophobia in the Swiss context. All other things equal, cultural minority and majority members do not appear to differ in their levels of xenophobia. However, individuals who perceive marginality tend to be more xenophobic than those who do not. The interesting exception is religious minority members, who are least xenophobic, but only when they perceive marginality. The findings cast doubt on the size argument of group threat theory, which predicts that xenophobia is higher where there are more immigrants. Even when measured in terms of the most ethnically visible and potentially most culturally threatening, immigrant group size does not explain cross–national differences in individual xenophobia. It seems to explain attitudes in some national contexts, but not others. Group size may only evoke perceptions of immigrant threat under certain necessary conditions as an interaction effect. Living adjacent to immigrant–rich communities amplifies xenophobia, but in a way that is partly attributable to contact. Counter to the predictions of cultural marginality theory, being culturally different does not universally lead one to espouse more tolerant views toward immigrants. The religious exception may stem from increased contact with immigrants, rather than simply the increased sympathy for other marginalized peoples implied by cultural marginality theory.
Keyword: Europe; group size; immigration; multilevel modeling; Sociology; Switzerland; xenophobia
URL: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7hn289m5
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20
Frequency, form and function of Cleft constructions in the Swiss SMS corpus
In: Frequency, Forms and Functions of Cleft Constructions in Romance and Germanic Contrastive, Corpus-Based Studies (2014), 325-345
IDS Bibliografie zur deutschen Grammatik
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