Language PolicyCambridge University Press, 2003年12月11日 Language policy is an issue of critical importance in the world today. In this introduction, Bernard Spolsky explores many debates at the forefront of language policy: ideas of correctness and bad language; bilingualism and multilingualism; language death and efforts to preserve endangered languages; language choice as a human and civil right; and language education policy. Through looking at the language practices, beliefs and management of social groups from families to supra-national organizations, he develops a theory of modern national language policy and the major forces controlling it, such as the demands for efficient communication, the pressure for national identity, the attractions of (and resistance to) English as a global language, and the growing concern for human and civil rights as they impinge on language. Two central questions asked in this wide-ranging survey are of how to recognize language policies, and whether or not language can be managed at all. |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 66 筆
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... constitutions or in law;others do not.Some implement their written policies; others clearly do not.Some countriescan provide data aboutthe number of people who speak various languages. Othersdo not even askthat questionin their national ...
... constitutions or in law;others do not.Some implement their written policies; others clearly do not.Some countriescan provide data aboutthe number of people who speak various languages. Othersdo not even askthat questionin their national ...
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... constitution. About 125 of the world's constitutions mention language (Jones 2001), andabout100 of them nameoneormore officialor national languageswith special privilegesof use. Orit might bea national legislature, making a ...
... constitution. About 125 of the world's constitutions mention language (Jones 2001), andabout100 of them nameoneormore officialor national languageswith special privilegesof use. Orit might bea national legislature, making a ...
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... constitution, or a language law, or a cabinet document oran administrative regulation.About 125 ofthe world's constitutions express some policyabout language, and about 100 ofthem name one or more official or national languages with ...
... constitution, or a language law, or a cabinet document oran administrative regulation.About 125 ofthe world's constitutions express some policyabout language, and about 100 ofthem name one or more official or national languages with ...
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... Constitution 1945) In 18 cases, therearetwo official or nationallanguages named (in halfwithprotection for other minority languages), in 5 cases therearethree and in4cases four languages named. Pashtu and Dari are the official languages ...
... Constitution 1945) In 18 cases, therearetwo official or nationallanguages named (in halfwithprotection for other minority languages), in 5 cases therearethree and in4cases four languages named. Pashtu and Dari are the official languages ...
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... Constitution of the Democratic Republic of Congo names four national languages (Kikongo,Lingala, Swahili and Tshiluba) and two official languages (French and English). The new South African Constitution lists eleven. Many countries are ...
... Constitution of the Democratic Republic of Congo names four national languages (Kikongo,Lingala, Swahili and Tshiluba) and two official languages (French and English). The new South African Constitution lists eleven. Many countries are ...
內容
Pursuing | |
The nature of language policy and its domains | |
Two monolingual politiesIceland andFrance 6 How English spread 7 Does the US have a language policy or just civil rights? | |
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常見字詞
Académie française Africa Afrikaans andthe Arabic associated asthe Basque beliefs bilingual education Bilingual Education Act bythe Catalan central century colonial language complex Constitution continued countries cultural dialects diglossia dominant economic efforts endangered languages English Englishspeaking established ethnic European Fishman foreign languages France French language fromthe German globalization groups Hebrew Hindi human rights ideology immigrants implementation independence indigenous languages instruction inthe language management language planning language policy language practices language rights languageof Latvia linguistic minorities linguistic rights literacy major Māori Māori Language minority languages monolingual mother tongue multilingual national language Navajo nineteenth official language oflanguage ofthe onthe percent plurilingual political population proficiency programs Quechua recognition recognized regional languages religious Republic reversing language shift Russian schools social sociolinguistic Soviet Spanish speak speakers spoken Spolsky standard status teaching thatthe thelanguage thereis tobe tothe United varieties vernacular withthe writing system Yiddish