“…Today's strong identification with the region, which is greater than in other parts of Slovenia and Croatia, is thus the result of the complex history, the geographical position on the Upper Adriatic at the junction of the Latin and Slavic world with open borders, the proximity to developed and democratic Western Europe, the remoteness from the Balkan hotspots and the relatively good economic standard. Consequently, the area is labelled with Istrian multi-ethnicity, multi-culturality, diversity and hybridity (Ashbrook, 2006;Baskar, 1999;Bufon, 2008a;Hrobat Virloget, 2015;Knez, 2010;Medica, 1998;Orlić, 2009;Raos, 2014;Rumiz, 1994;Šantić, 2000;Šuligoj, 2015a;Urošević, 2012;Žerjavić, 1993, p. 633),²¹ and with multilingualism and mixed practices, which identify people within their multilingual/multi-ethnic/multi-cultural setting (Skelin Horvat & Muhvić-Dimanovski, 2012;Urošević, 2012). Istria is thus more about identification rather than identity as a set of choices, which were made in the bi-ethnic/multi-ethnic communities, accompanied by constant processes of assimilation, linguistic socialisation and nationalisa-tion²² (D' Alessio, 2006, pp.…”