Abstract
Migrants, people who significantly contribute to the cultural diversity of the modern world, generally want to integrate into the society of the country they came to, but if they are part of a larger homogeneous ethnic or religious group in the host country, they often seek a certain level of recognition of their collective cultural identity. Because of the different historical conditions in which states arose, they react to these demands as to maladaptation of immigrants, which results in a cultural conflict that usually leads to their marginalization, ghettoization and deprived position. The paper presents contemporary theoretical approaches to cultural globalization, and analyzes the impact of migration on the development of different models of multiculturalism, considering the large wave of migrants that moved to Europe since 2015.
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