Drawings of Belgium: what does the size of Flanders and Wallonia tell us?

In October-November 2010, more than 5000 Belgian students from both side of the linguistic border have been asked to “draw Belgium†– no other guidelines were given. In addition to this rather unusual question, the students were surveyed on their political interest, political knowledge, identities, political perceptions and preferences as well as their attitudes towards Belgium and her future. The drawings show that half of the students drew Belgium with the language border and half did not. What explains this difference is not the language one speaks (so there was no difference between D... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Deschouwer, Kris
Kavadias, Dimokritos
Reuchamps, Min
Deuxième édition du colloque Belgium: The state of the federation
Dokumenttyp: conferenceObject
Erscheinungsdatum: 2013
Schlagwörter: Mental map / Belgium / Federalism
Sprache: Ndonga
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27291192
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/146506

In October-November 2010, more than 5000 Belgian students from both side of the linguistic border have been asked to “draw Belgium†– no other guidelines were given. In addition to this rather unusual question, the students were surveyed on their political interest, political knowledge, identities, political perceptions and preferences as well as their attitudes towards Belgium and her future. The drawings show that half of the students drew Belgium with the language border and half did not. What explains this difference is not the language one speaks (so there was no difference between Dutch-speakers and French-speakers) but the level of political knowledge and the identity of the respondents (students who feel Belgian only draw Belgium without the language border and students who feel Flemish only are more likely to draw the language border). One further dimension needs to be explored (when applicable): the size of Flanders and of Wallonia. Does the size tell us anything about the political attitudes of the students towards Belgium? Does it relate anyhow to their identities? Or is rather a matter of political knowledge? Or is it even simply due to the shape of Belgium where Wallonia – the largest in size – region is more easily cut down when quickly drawn? Above all, with this research we can indirectly explore the processes – of socialization – behind the formation of political preferences and more specifically how socio-demographics, political knowledge, political interest, voting behaviour interact with the students’ representations and attitudes vis-à -vis their country and its future.