This is South Tyrol

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8 Foreword by the "Landeshauptmann"1

Dear readers, What do tourists and visitors associate most strongly with South Tyrol? Ă–tzi the Iceman? Lake Kaltern or, even better, the wines from the area around Lake Kaltern? Apple strudel and speck? Or perhaps the peaks of the Drei Zinnen and Reinhold Messner, or the Kastelruther Spatzen folk group? These are the culinary and cultural delights, the landscapes and personalities that most people think of when they think of South Tyrol.

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The peculiar characteristic of South Tyrol, that of three language groups living harmoniously together in a relatively small land, is much less often noticed. Innumerable visitors will have asked themselves why the road signs feature two or even three place names, and why is it that only German is spoken in so many places, although South Tyrol is in fact in Italy. The answers to these questions cannot be found in any tourist brochure: the South Tyrolean provincial government has thus decided to publish an autonomy brochure that presents not the land(scape)

and people, but rather the society and culture of coexistence. The 500,000 South Tyroleans (of whom two thirds speak German, one quarter speak Italian and 4 per cent speak Ladin) did not always live together as peacefully as they do today. Only after several decades of negotiations, occasionally accompanied by bombs and violence, was an equilibrium created between the German, Italian and Ladin-speaking South Tyroleans that has made possible today’s economic prosperity. This brochure is intended to offer a concise – but by no means superficial – explanation to all those who wish to understand exactly what makes South Tyrol tick. After reading it you will realise that South Tyrol is not just about the Drei Zinnen or the Kastelruther Spatzen, not just Ötzi or Reinhold Messner and most certainly not merely German or Italian. South Tyrol is diversified and different; its people just as much as its nature and landscape. Yours Luis Durnwalder

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18 South Tyrol in figures

Meet the locals High life expectancy, high birth rate: key data on the population of South Tyrol.

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102,869 Inhabitants of provincial capital, Bozen/Bolzano

505,067 inhabitants

COPENHAGEN, DUBLIN,

DRESDEN

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505,067 inhabitants in South Tyrol 2011

Death rate

7.7 ‰

441,000

Second lowest of 110 Italian provinces

414,000

1992 1972

374,000 1962

Life expectancy

85.3 80.2 Italy: 84.3 / 79.7 years EU: 82.4 / 76.4 years

Birth rate

10.6 ‰ Fourth highest of 110 Italian provinces

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205,306 1880


18 South Tyrol in figures

Hard at work

1 in every 4 South Tyroleans is engaged in some form of voluntary work.

Low unemployment, high Gross Domestic Product: the South Tyrolean economy in ďŹ gures

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Unemployment rate:

3.3 % Italy: 8.4 % EU: 9.7 %

Cars / 1000 inhabitants

520 86

Italy: 606 EU: 474


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GDP per capita:

34,700 € 60 %

Italy: 24,300 euro EU: 23,500 euro

of South Tyrol’s energy needs – excluding transport – are from renewable sources (water, biomass, biogas, solar, wind, geothermal)

Employment rate:

73.5 % Italy: 57.5 % EU: 64.6 %

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18 South Tyrol in figures

Home sweet home South Tyrol is around the same size as the Black Forest, but has much more than just forest to offer. Its mountains, for example: there are over 350 summits higher than 3000 metres, with the Ortler at 3905 metres the highest of all peaks in the eastern Alps.

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Surface proportion over 1600 metres above sea level:

60 %

approx.

675,000 football pitches

Surface area:

7400 km2 The largest Italian province in terms of surface area, comparable with the Black Forest

Every tenth apple in Europe and every third apple in Italy is grown in South Tyrol. South Tyrol produces 900,000 tonnes of apples per year on a fruit-growing surface of 18,400 hectares. South Tyrol is thus Europe’s largest apple orchard.

69 /km2

approx.

20,000 88

football pitches


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Surface proportion designated as a protected nature area:

40 % Inhabitable surface area:

6% 2.85 % is already inhabited

380 km of cycle paths

1100 times round a football pitch

Wooded surface area:

50 % 9


18 South Tyrol in figures

Guests, tourists or "foreigners" Nearly six million holidaymakers, half a million inhabitants: tourism is the horse that pulls the South Tyrolean cart

800 fortresses, castles and stately residences house museums, hotels and even a botanical garden.

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29 mill. overnight stays a year

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5.8 mill.

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tourists a year. The same as the Dominican Republic, Dubai or Tibet

300 days with sunshine per year: the same as Crete.

Length of ski pistes

1200 km The same as the distance from Munich to Naples

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28 One land, three languages

Eins, due, trëi … South Tyrol is where the Romance and Germanic cultures meet. The "aborigines" of South Tyrol are however the Ladin people.

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69.4 % In the 2011 census 314,600 South Tyroleans said they were German …

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118,100

4.5 %

Italians in South Tyrol

…and 20,500 said they were Ladin speakers

113,500 2001

116,900 1991

In addition, some 44,000 foreigners live in South Tyrol, of whom 1/3 are from other 1971 EU states.

137,800

128,300 1961

27,000

26.1 %

1921

…118,000 said they were Italian …

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8900 1900


28 One land, three languages

German, Italian, Ladin German speakers make up the largest proportion of the population. Historically this language group dates back to the Germanic, Alemannic and Bavarian tribes that crossed today’s South Tyrol during the Migration Period and to some extent settled there. The South Tyrolean dialect is used rather than High German in everyday life.

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The second largest language group is Italian. It is, in cultural and historical terms, the most recent arrival. In terms of ďŹ gures, the Italian language experienced its strongest growth group in the Fascist era in the 1920s and 1930s, when Mussolini tried to emphasise the "Italian character" of South Tyrol by promoting massive immigration from the south.

72 % of Germanspeaking South Tyroleans live in the country

Localities with a 40 % proportion of the relevant language group


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98 % of Italians live in towns

The Ladin language group is considered to be the oldest in the land.

87 % of Ladins live in the Grรถden/Gardena or the Gadertal/ Val Badia valleys

Ladin (also called Rhaeto-Romance) is a neo-Latin or Romance language. After the conquest of the Alpine regions by the Romans in 15 B.C. the native population absorbed the vulgar Latin of officials and soldiers, without however completely giving up their own language.

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38 South Tyrol’s recent history

Separation from Austria 1918

1922

The First World War ends and, with the peace treaty of St. Germain, the southern part of the Austrian crown land of Tyrol becomes part of Italy. The new frontier is the Brenner Pass.

With the March on Rome, the Fascists take power in Italy and South Tyrol sees the beginning of a phase of forced Italianisation. Encouraged by Benito Mussolini’s regime, tens of thousands of Italians immigrate to South Tyrol, use of the German language is forbidden, German schools are closed, while German-speaking officials and teachers are dismissed or compulsorily transferred.

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? 1939 Hitler and Mussolini agree on a "solution" to the problem of South Tyrol. South Tyroleans will have the choice of leaving their homeland and being resettled in the German Reich, or becoming Italian citizens and abandoning their own identity. A massive campaign (also supported by the Nazis) begins in favour of resettlement, ultimately adopted by some 86 % of all South Tyroleans. Wartime events however mean that in the end "only" some 75,000 South Tyroleans actually leave their homeland.

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38 South Tyrol’s recent history

The struggle for autonomy2

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1946

1961

After the end of the Second World War the victorious powers refuse South Tyroleans the right of self-determination, but obligate Italy and Austria to conduct negotiations over South Tyrol. On 5 September 1946 the Italian Prime Minister Alcide Degasperi and the Austrian Foreign Minister Karl Gruber sign the Paris Treaty, which secures special provisions for South Tyrol as regards the development of language, economy and culture. The Gruber-Degasperi accord forms an integral part of the peace treaty signed by the Allies with Italy and at the same time officially becomes an international matter.

As the Paris Treaty3 has yet to be implemented 15 years following its signing, Austria appeals to the UN. At the same time tensions in South Tyrol are escalating. On the night of 11 June 1961 dozens of electricity pylons throughout South Tyrol are blown up. The "night of ďŹ re" draws the attention of the Italian and European public to South Tyrol.

1972 Following the debates at the UN and the bomb attacks at the beginning of the 1960s, lengthy negotiations between Rome, Bozen/ Bolzano and Vienna ďŹ nally produce a whole "package4" of measures, introduced as the Second Autonomy Statute. The new autonomy for South Tyrol comes into force on 20 January 1972 and secures equal rights and protection for all three language groups in the land.

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38 South Tyrol’s recent history

A new epoch

1992 All measures of the South Tyrol package have been implemented: Italy and Austria see that the aim of effective protection of minorities has been achieved and now officially settle the dispute that has lain before the UN since 1959. South Tyrolean autonomy nevertheless retains its international status.

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1998 Following the accession of Austria to the European Union and the introduction of the Schengen Agreement on free movement within Europe, the border posts at the Brenner Pass are removed.

2012 Autonomy has been gradually developed and strengthened. Transnational co-operation has also been increased, for example in the form of the European Grouping of Territorial Co-Operation (EGTC5), which includes the Euroregion of Tyrol-South Tyrol-Trentino. The EGTC provides an institutional framework for co-operation between the three areas.

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48 South Tyrol’s autonomy

Constitution and agreements South Tyrol’s autonomy is based on three fundamental documents: the Italian Constitution, the Paris Treaty and the Second Autonomy Statute.

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§6 The protection of minorities is set out in Art. 6 of the Italian Constitution.

§

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§


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1992

After the end of the Second World War South Tyrol is once more absorbed by Italy. The victorious powers however stipulate full protection for the Austrian minority as a condition for this. The result is the Paris Treaty between Italy and Austria, deďŹ ning the outlines of autonomy. The treaty forms the international safeguard for South Tyrolean autonomy.

Declaration of end of dispute

1972 Second Autonomy Statute

With the Second Autonomy Statute of 1972 South Tyrol receives the de facto status of a region whose legislative and administrative autonomy is, however, far greater than the competencies of a region governed under normal statute.

+

1948 First Autonomy Statute

+

+

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1946 Paris Treaty


48 South Tyrol’s autonomy

Who does what? The 1972 Autonomy Statute transferred a whole range of legislative and administrative competencies to the province of South Tyrol. A differentiation is made between primary and secondary competencies as well as the competencies of the state.

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State competencies • Immigration • Defence • Police • Law • Financing

Within these areas the province must adhere to the principles set down by the state. South Tyrol may decide on the details. The tolerance is much smaller than for primary competencies.

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South Tyrol’s primary competencies • Culture • Vocational training • Kindergartens • Social affairs • Roads • Housing • Local public transport • Tourism • Handicrafts • Trade • Industry • Agriculture • Civil defence • Nature parks

Within these areas South Tyrol can issue laws without having to give consideration to state laws. Laws in the province must however correspond to the principles required by the constitution and the European Union.

South Tyrol secondary competencies • Sport • Schools • Health

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48 South Tyrol’s autonomy

Rules for living together Different groups can only live together in a political system if the needs of all ethnic groups are taken into consideration and have a balanced relationship with each other. The three language groups in South Tyrol co-exist on the basis of a complex and special legal system that combines the rotation of offices, equal numbers as regards committee membership and the proportional representation of all language groups.

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2. Bilingualism in public offices and services, two or even three place names

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1. Ethnic proportionality6 in the public services and in the system of government

3. Teaching in pupils’ native language 27


48 South Tyrol’s autonomy

So everyone has a voice Proportionality as a basic principle‌

Power is divided on the basis of four principles:

Participation of all ethnic groups in the political decision-making process.

A high degree of autonomy for each language group ‌

The provincial government must correspond to the numerical ratio of each language group in the provincial assembly. Under international agreement, the presidency of the provincial assembly rotates between the various language groups.

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‌ especially in cultural and educational policy. Cultural autonomy within the educational system, divided according to language group, is a typical expression of the protection of collective rights, as all decisions in this area require only the agreement of the relevant language group. Each language group has its own educational system which provides instruction in the appropriate native language and the learning of the respective other language as a second language.

‌ of political representation, recruitment of personnel to the public services and the distribution of certain public resources (e.g. funding for culture or social housing). The ratio of the language groups as the basis for the proportional allocation of jobs and resources is determined and updated every ten years on the basis of the census.

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The minority veto as a last line of defence of the fundamental interests of a language group.

group, the provincial assembly can demand a separate vote for each language group or challenge a law in the constitutional court.

If the principle of equal rights for all language groups is perceived as being threatened by a particular language

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58 South Tyrol’s budget

It’s all about the money The South Tyrolean budget currently runs to some five billion euros a year. This is funded by the tax revenues collected in South Tyrol. Of this income, nine tenths remain within the province, with the remaining tenth paid to Rome.

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5 bn € 1/10

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Unlike other regions in Italy, the funds from the provincial budget finance a whole range of areas, including the entire education system, from kindergarten to university, health and social affairs as well as the administration of all major and minor roads.

750 mill. € Education and culture

600 mill. € Administration

1.6 bn € 500 mill. € Municipalities

Health and social affairs 31


Publisher Autonomous Province of South Tyrol Silvius-Magnago-Platz 1 Bozen/Bolzano

8 Glossary

Idea and content Office for Communications lpa@provinz.bz.it Concept and graphics Gruppe Gut Gestaltung Print Athesia Druck, Bozen/Bolzano Edition August 2012

1: "Landeshauptmann", Governor: in South Tyrol, the head of the provincial administration. The title originally referred to the governor of a principality or province in the Holy Roman Empire and the Austrian Empire. Currently (since 1989) Dr. Luis Durnwalder 8 p. 2 2: Autonomy: statutebased, far-reaching political self-government within a state. For South Tyrol this represents a greater degree of responsibility for numerous functions than any other Italian province 8 p. 18

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3: Package: a collection of 132 regulations, negotiated over many years, that guarantee the protection of minorities in the region and form the basis for the Second Autonomy Statute of 1972 8 p. 19 4: Paris Treaty: concluded between Italy and Austria on 5 September 1946, this treaty – also known as the GruberDegasperi agreement – regulates the protection of the German-speaking inhabitants of the Trentino-South Tyrol region. The Paris Treaty forms part of the peace treaty signed by Italy after the Second World War and is regarded as the Magna Carta of South Tyrolean autonomy 8 p. 19

and interregional cooperation. In South Tyrol it is the institutional arm of the Euroregion of TyrolSouth Tyrol-Trentino, which covers the historic Tyrolean lands 8 p. 21 6: Proportionality: the distribution of offices and positions according to the numerical ratio of the political parties represented, the balance of power of various denominations or other groups. In South Tyrol this has an ethnic basis: public sector jobs, development funds and social housing are all distributed according to the strength of the respective language groups 8 p. 27

5: EGTC, or European Group for Territorial Cooperation, is an instrument of the EU aimed at promoting transnational


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