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How was the national agenda of a previously subordinated, ruling
Latvian majority reconciled with established academic practices for
appointments and enrolment - candidates judged on merit
irrespective of ethnicity? Following the disintegration of the
Russian Empire, the ethnic Latvian majority assumed power and used
state resources to further their national project. Complex national
issues arose when a new university, teaching in Latvian, was
founded in 1919 - Latvian was a language previously regarded as a
peasant vernacular wholly unsuitable for cultural or academic
purposes. During the same period the Latvian state was a
multi-ethnic parliamentary democracy containing several ethnic
minorities, all with full citizenship rights. Some of these
minorities, the Baltic Germans and the Jews in particular,
possessed considerable cultural capita land experience of academia.
The inherent conflicts and compromises in this double agenda are
the main focus of Between National and Academic Agendas.
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