Every morning we open our eyes, instinctively turn off the alarm clock, we prepare coffee ... We make some more monotonous actions, which always ends with locking the door. We run out into the streets, rushing to work or to study. There are always a lot of people around us. we encounter some in the subway, at work and with totally different people, we drink coffee or watch a movie. Each of these people is unique in its own way. Everyone has his own character, habits, behavior. But, at the same time, life in a single society binds people with invisible threads. Threads intertwine and form something inseparable, common to all: language, culture, laws - the state. But what happens if a person is unfamiliar to the language and culture of the society in which he lives? How should he act: to remain true to his traditions, to intertwine with his culture or to try to adapt to a new life? …show more content…
And it is quite debatable, if it is good, when the state allows people of other nationalities to preserve and continue their traditions and culture in a new society?!
Now a lot is said about multiculturalism. This is not accidental, because globalization and mass migration led to the fact that the problem of multiculturalism has become socially significant for most developed countries of the world.
Humanity is moving slowly along the path of integration. This phenomenon is directly related to the development of the economy. Almost all countries are united in a large network called the world economy, which is not profitable for existence in conditions of low integration. Political isolation and low integration lead to a reduction in trade and investment, and the impact of investment should not be