Quote:
Originally Posted by Acajack
I flip between whether it's the big neighbours or the actual legally enforced linguistic borders within Switzerland itself that make the language situation so stable in that country.
Or maybe it's a mix.
Though if you're a minority, having lots of people just across the border who speak the same language as you, won't necessarily ensure your survival unless you have institutional support (and ideally, protection) for your language in the place where you actually live.
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It's the history that is different. The Francophone cantons joined Switzerland as equals. They were not conquered and submitted, living under German domination for 200 years, with Geneva majority German-speaking at some point due to inflows of German-speaking immigrants ruling the city and its businesses and lording over the Francophones.
In the places where the Francophones were dominated by the Germanophones (namely Jura), there was, and still is, some resentment (including bomb attacks in the 1970s).
PS: On a side note, the Germanophone authorities of the Canton of Bern have recently agreed to cede one important Francophone town to the Canton of Jura. The transfer should take place in 2026 I believe. This is equivalent to New Brunswick agreeing to cede Edmundston to the province of Québec. Also, the city in the Canton of Bern that is equivalent to Moncton in New Brunswick is currently about to become majority Francophone (after having been majority Germanophone for centuries), because of the new immigrants who mainly integrate in the Francophone community. The Germanophone authorities of the Canton of Bern are quite relaxed about it.