Thursday, 14 July 2016


Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 5
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Thumbs down Homogeneous vs. Heterogeneous in nation building

Homogeneous societies are more at ease and comfortable: They are overwhelmingly unified and similar in heritage, culture, religion, language and music; They produce more brotherhood, harmony and solidarity; They are more supportive toward each other, protect each other and defend each other; They are more democratic

Heterogeneous societies are more divided, strife torn and war raged; they produce more alienation, dismemberment and distrust; They produce cultural and ethnic genocide, tribal conflict, religious conflict and disunion; They kill autonomy and diversity; They are more divided in history, identity and culture; More societal differences, conflict and discord; violence erupts and the come apart at the seams.
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Saturday, 25 June 2016

homogenous socity

A homogeneous society shares a common language, ethnicity and culture. Japan and South Korea are examples of homogeneous societies. Within these societies, the immigrant population is low.japanese often think of themselves as a homogeneous society, with a strong sense of group and national identity and little or no ethnic or racial diversity. But such differences exist in Japan, as in all societies, as Harvard University professors Theodore Bestor and Helen Hardacre explain in this video series.


  1. :  of the same or a similar kind or nature
  2. 2:  of uniform structure or composition throughout <a culturallyhomogeneous neighborhood>
  3. 3:  having the property that if each variable is replaced by a constant timesthat variable the constant can be factored out :  having each term of the same degree if all variables are considered <a homogeneous e