Multicultural particularism is the belief that a common culture for all people is either undesirable or impossible.
[1] In discussions of multiculturalism, historian and educator Diane Ravitch draws a distinction between what she terms "pluralistic" and "particularistic" varieties and suggests that other writers often blur or ignore this distinction.
[2] In a long essay about multiculturalism in American education, Ravitch praises the inclusiveness of multicultural pluralism while decrying what she sees as multiple flaws and failures of multicultural particularism.
This article about cultural globalization is a stub.
You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.