Results 311 to 320 of about 8,912,908 (372)
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2021
Drawing on four decades of research, the book traces on earlier models and offers an expanded and updated theory of language policy and management. The book surveys the language practices and planning efforts of individuals, families, private and public institutions, local and national advocates and managers, and regional and national governments.
B. Spolsky
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Drawing on four decades of research, the book traces on earlier models and offers an expanded and updated theory of language policy and management. The book surveys the language practices and planning efforts of individuals, families, private and public institutions, local and national advocates and managers, and regional and national governments.
B. Spolsky
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This book is about policy decisions concerning language and as such probes the origins and conceptual foundations of the relationships between state and language.
Florian Coulmas
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Language Policy, 2018
Lo Bianco (Curr Issues Lang Plan 9(2):155–178, 2008) proposed an “ensemble of [three] activities” that comprise language policy: the “textual,” “discursive,” and “public performance” (p. 157). When expressed in language, the current study proposes that each of Lo Bianco’s three activities (text, discourse, performance) becomes a register—a variety of ...
Shannon Fitzsimmons‐Doolan
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Lo Bianco (Curr Issues Lang Plan 9(2):155–178, 2008) proposed an “ensemble of [three] activities” that comprise language policy: the “textual,” “discursive,” and “public performance” (p. 157). When expressed in language, the current study proposes that each of Lo Bianco’s three activities (text, discourse, performance) becomes a register—a variety of ...
Shannon Fitzsimmons‐Doolan
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Current Issues in Language Planning, 2020
This research studies language policy, linguistic landscape and residents’ perception of language use in Guangzhou, China, exploring the extent to which they are convergent with or divergent from one another. With the triad framework encompassing spatial
Yanmei Han, Xiaodan Wu
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This research studies language policy, linguistic landscape and residents’ perception of language use in Guangzhou, China, exploring the extent to which they are convergent with or divergent from one another. With the triad framework encompassing spatial
Yanmei Han, Xiaodan Wu
semanticscholar +1 more source
Current Issues in Language Planning, 2020
This qualitative study investigates the process of family language policy and planning among a group of immigrant mothers with south Asian backgrounds in Hong Kong, and explores the underlying cultural, socio-political and ideological reasons.
M. Gu, Yawen Han
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This qualitative study investigates the process of family language policy and planning among a group of immigrant mothers with south Asian backgrounds in Hong Kong, and explores the underlying cultural, socio-political and ideological reasons.
M. Gu, Yawen Han
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Language Policy in Superdiverse Indonesia
, 2020Indonesia has an extreme diversity of linguistic wealth, with 707 languages by one count, or 731 languages and more than 1,100 dialects in another estimate, spoken by more than 600 ethnicities spread across 17,504 islands in the archipelago.
Subhan Zein
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Problematizing EMI language policy in a transnational world
English Today, 2020Language policies generally seek to establish, regulate, and conform linguistic practices – whether explicit or implicit – that occur within an ‘authorized’ domain.
Peter I. De Costa+2 more
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An ecological approach to family language policy research: the case of Miao families in China
, 2020This paper reports on a study that used an ecological approach to explore family language policy and practice among Miao families in China. In the study, we surveyed 900 Miao families and interviewed 20 parents with regard to their language practices ...
Q. Shen, Liangyan Wang, X. Gao
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Language Policy and Language-in-Education Policy in the Philippines
Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 1981The major local (Austronesian) languages of the Philippines are Cebuano, Tagalog (the basis of pilipino), Ilocano, Hiligaynon, Bicol, Waray (Samber-Leyte), Kapampangan, and Pangasinan (rank ordered according to the number of first-language speakers).
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