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Brussels-Capital Region

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This article explains the status of the "Brussels-Capital Region". The main article about Brussels is here.
The Brussels-Capital Region (French: Région de Bruxelles-Capitale, Dutch: Brussels Hoofdstedelijk Gewest, German: Region Brüssel-Hauptstadt) or short Brussels Region (French: Région Bruxelloise, Dutch: Brussels Gewest) is one of the three regions of Belgium. Brussels citizens belonging to the French-speaking French Community of Belgium or to the Flemish Community, or often to one of the many communities of migrant and EU-nationals. Both French and Dutch are official languages in Brussels; all public services are bilingual.

History

The Belgian Constitution announced the creation of three regions since the constitutional reform of 24 December 1970, when an article 107quater (the current art. 3) was inserted, stating that "Belgium is made up of three regions: The Flemish region, the Walloon region and the Brussels region." However, only after the adoption the special (constitutional) law of 12 January 1989, the Region came into existence, nine years later than the Flemish and the Walloon region.

Demographics

On January 1, 2005, the region had a population of 1,006,749 for 161.382 km² which gives a population density of 6,238.29 inhabitants per km².

Population by national origin at the 1st March 1991
(last census ever organized in Belgium)
Belgians born in Belgium (and Belgian-born) 607,446 63.7%
Belgians born abroad (and Belgian-born)
including:
Congo, Rwanda and Burundi (former Belgian overseas territories)
21,028

8,116
2,2%
(100%)
38.6%
Naturalized migrants
(not born in Belgium, not Belgian-born)

including:
France
Morocco
36,938

6,348
3,022
3.9%
(100%)
17.2%
8.2%
Naturalized 1st and 2nd generations
(born in Belgium, not Belgian-born)

including:
France
Morocco
17,045

2,757
2,522
1.8%
(100%)
16.2%
14.8%
Non-naturalized 1st and 2nd generations
including:
Morocco
87,987

37,300
9.2%
(100%)
42.4%
Old migrants
(born abroad, foreign nationals, living in Belgium in 1986)

including:
Morocco
Italy
123,411


35,138
16,027
12.9%

(100%)
28.5%
13%
Recent migrants
(born abroad, foreign nationals, arrived in Belgium after 1986)

including:
France
Morocco
60,185


8,513
4,970
6.3%

(100%)
14.1%
8.3%
Total Brussels-Capital Region 954,040 100%

source of data in the above table: T. Eggerickx et al., De allochtone bevolking in België, Algemene Volks- en Woningtelling op 1 maart 1991, Monografie nr. 3, 1999, Nationaal Instituut voor de Statistiek

At the last Belgian census in 1991, there were 63.7% inhabitants in Brussels-Capital Region who answered they were Belgian citizens, born as such in Belgium. However, there have been numerous individual or familial migrations towards Brussels since the end of the XVIIIth century, including political refugees (Karl Marx, Victor Hugo, Pierre Joseph Proudhon, Léon Daudet e.g.) from neighbouring or more distanced countries as well as labour migrants, former foreign students or expats, and many Belgian families in Brussels can tell at least a foreign grandparent.

Brussels and its suburbs evolved from uniligual Dutch-speaking towns to a billingual metropole, but at the moment the dominant language is French and the ethnic and national self-identification of French-Speaking Bruxellois can vary from Belgian, Francophone Belgian, Bruxellois (like the Memeller in interwar ethnic censuses in Memel), Walloon (for people who migrated from the Wallonia Region at an adult age), but also all the national origins: people tend to call themselves Moroccans or Turks rather than an American-style hyphenated version. The original Dutch dialect of Brussels (Brussels) still survives among the local Flemings; it's a form of Brabantic (the variant of Dutch spoken in the ancient Duchy of Brabant) with many loanwords from French.

The migrant communities, as well as rapidly growing communities of EU-nationals from other EU-member states, speak Moroccan dialectal Arabic, Turkish, Spanish (most Spaniards came from the Asturias, a minority from Andalusia and some from Catalonia and the Basque country), Italian, Polish, Rif Berber, English and other languages, including those of every EU-member state in the expat communities. The degree of linguistic integration varies widely within each migrant group.

Among all major migrants groups from outside the EU, a majority of the permanent residents have acquired the Belgian nationality. Since the 2000 Nationality Law (snel-Belgwet or Quickly-Belgian law in Dutch), knowledge (even basic) of a Belgian national language is no longer compulsory and there are thus e.g. Belgian Turks who can't speak or understand French or Dutch.

Although historically (since the Counter-Reformation persecution and expulsion of Protestants by the Spaniards in the XVIthe century) Roman Catholic, most people in Brussels are non-practicing. About 10% of the population regularly attends church services. Among the religions, Roman Catholicism is in the majority, followed by a large minority of Muslims and by atheists, agnosticists and other Humanists which are also recognised as a philosophical group, Vrijzinnig-Laïcité (an apporoxime translation would be secularists or free thinkers), of which Brussels houses several key organisations. Other (recognised) religions (Protestantism, Anglicanism, Orthodoxy and Judaism) are practised by much smaller groups in Brussels. recognized religions and Laïcité enjoy public funding and school courses: every pupil in an official school from 6 years old to 18 must choose 2 hours per week of compulsory religion- or Laïcité-inspired morals.

Institutions

Because of how the federalisation was handled in Belgium, the public institutions in Brussels offer a bewildering complexity. The complexity is more apparent in the lawbooks than in the facts, since the members of the Brussels Parliament and Government also act in other capacities, e.g. as members of the council of the Brussels agglomeration or the community commissions. One distinguishes:

Also the federal state, the French Community and the Flemish Community exercise competencies on the territory of the region. 19 of the 72 French-speaking members of the Brussels Parliament are also members of the Parliament of the French Community of Belgium, and until 2004 this was also the case for 6 Dutch-speaking members, who were at the same time members of the Flemish Parliament. Now, people voting for a Flemish party have to vote separately for 6 directly elected members of the Flemish Parliament.

Due to the multiple capacities of single members of parliament, there are parliamentarians who are at the same member of the Brussels Parliament, member of the Assembly of the Common Community Commission, member of the Assembly of the French Community Commission, member of the Parliament of the French Community of Belgium and "community senator" in the Belgian Senate. At the moment, this is the case for Mr. François Roelants du Vivier (for the Mouvement Réformateur), Mrs. Amina Derbaki Sbaï (since june 2004 for the Parti Socialiste, but beforehand, since 2003, for the Mouvement Réformateur) and Mrs Sfia Bouarfa (since 2001 for the Parti Socialiste).

See also

External links

Communities, regions and provinces of Belgium

Communities: French | Flemish | German
Regions and provinces: Flanders: Antwerp | East Flanders | Flemish Brabant | Limburg | West Flanders
Wallonia: Hainaut | Liège | Luxembourg | Namur | Walloon Brabant
Brussels-Capital Region
[edit] Brussels-Capital Region

Anderlecht | Auderghem / Oudergem | Berchem-Sainte-Agathe / Sint-Agatha-Berchem | Bruxelles-Ville / Stad Brussel | Ixelles / Elsene | Etterbeek | Evere | Forest / Vorst | Ganshoren | Jette | Koekelberg | Molenbeek-Saint-Jean / Sint-Jans-Molenbeek | Saint-Gilles / Sint-Gillis | Saint-Josse-ten-Node / Sint-Joost-ten-Noode | Schaerbeek / Schaarbeek | Woluwe-Saint-Lambert / Sint-Lambrechts-Woluwe | Woluwe-Saint-Pierre / Sint-Pieters-Woluwe | Uccle / Ukkel | Watermael-Boitsfort / Watermaal-Bosvoorde
Authorities
Minister-President of the Brussels-Capital Region | Brussels Parliament | Governor of Brussels-Capital

 


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