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  1. The Hungarian Alliance (Slovak: Maďarská Aliancia; Hungarian: Magyar Szövetség, Szövetség–Aliancia) is a political party in Slovakia for the ethnic Hungarian minority, previously known simply as the "Alliance", it was founded when "Party of the Hungarian Community" and Most–Híd merged into "Hungarian Community Togetherness".

  2. Hungarian political structures in Czechoslovakia were formed relatively late and finalized their formation only in the mid-1920s. The political policy of the Hungarian minority can be categorized by their attitude to the Czechoslovak state and peace treaties into three main directions: activists, communists, and negativists.

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  4. Magyarization (UK: / ˌ m æ dʒ ər aɪ ˈ z eɪ ʃ ən / US: / ˌ m ɑː dʒ ər ɪ-/, also Hungarianization; Hungarian: magyarosítás), after "Magyar"—the Hungarian autonym—was an assimilation or acculturation process by which non-Hungarian nationals living in the Kingdom of Hungary, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, adopted the Hungarian national identity and language in the ...

  5. Hungary - Ethnicities, Minorities, Magyars: The substitution of Magyar for Latin and German raised a new and painful issue. The population of Hungary, even excluding Croatia, had never been purely Magyar, but the pre-Magyar inhabitants of the plains and the newcomers to them (outside the towns) had quickly become Magyarized; and, while this was not true of the peripheral areas, their ...

  6. Magyars or Hungarians [2] are an ethnic group primarily associated with Hungary. The word Hungarian has also a wider meaning, because – especially in the past – it referred to all inhabitants of the Kingdom of Hungary irrespective of their ethnicity. Specifically, the Latin term natio hungarica referred to all nobles of the Kingdom of ...

  7. The Hungarian Minority Self-Government System as a means of increasing Romani political participation. National Democratic Institute Assessment Report, September/October. Washington, DC: National Democratic Institute. Google Scholar Nyíri, P. (1999). New Chinese migrants in Europe: The case of the Chinese community in Hungary. Brookfield: Ashgate.

  8. Mar 6, 2021 · 57 Brubaker et al., Nationalist Politics and Everyday Ethnicity in a Transylvanian Town, 19. 58 George Schöpflin, ‘Hungary and the EU: the Status Law and After’, 215–223. 59 Tamás Kiss, ‘Nemzeti diskurzusok hálójában’ (In the Net of National Discourses ), in Magyar Kisebbség Nemzetpolitikai Szemle 18/3–4 (2013), 69–70.

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