Should Immigrants Have Fewer Language Rights and Socio-Economic Rights Than Citizens? An Enquiry Into The Moral Bases of Denizens’ Linguistic and Socio-Economic Entitlements KU Leuven
Immigrants are generally thought to be entitled to fewer language rights than citizens, whose longsettled languages almost universally receive more official recognition. More recently, the idea has appeared both in the academic literature and in the public debates in European and North-American states that immigrants might likewise be entitled to fewer socio-economic rights. Should immigrants really have fewer rights than citizens? What, if ...