1st Edition

Language Policy Hidden Agendas and New Approaches

By Elana Shohamy Copyright 2006
    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    206 Pages
    by Routledge

    Policies concerning language use are increasingly tested in an age of frequent migration and cultural synthesis. With conflicting factors and changing political climates influencing the policy-makers, Elana Shohamy considers the effects that these policies have on the real people involved. Using examples from the US and UK, she shows how language policies are promoted and imposed, overtly and covertly, across different countries and in different contexts.

    Concluding with arguments for a more democratic and open approach to language policy and planning, the final note is one of optimism, suggesting strategies for resistance to language attrition and ways to protect the linguistic rights of groups and individuals.

    Part 1 Part I Language, manipulations, policy; Chapter 1 Expanding language; Chapter 2 Manipulating languages; Chapter 3 Expanding language policy; Part 2 Part II Mechanisms affecting de facto language policies; Chapter 4 Rules and regulations; Chapter 5 Language education policies; Chapter 6 Language tests; Chapter 7 Language in the public space; Part 3 Part III Consequences and reactions; Chapter 8 Consequences; Chapter 9 Reactions; Epilogue: Language as a free commodity; Bibliography; Index;

    Biography

    Elana Shohamy is affiliated with the University of Tel Aviv.  She is a major figure in international applied linguistics circles and right at the top of the language policy and testing fields.  She founded and co-edits a new joournal: Language Policy (Kluwer), has co-authored several books on language policy and recently published an important book on testing: The Power of Tests: critical perspectives on the uses of language tests (Pearson, 2001).

     

     

    'The book is a must in the reading list of all those who believe that we academics ought to pursue our vocation in the interests of the community at large that, after all, helps sustain the institutions that host us.  It is a wake-up call to critical thinking and activism.' - Kanavillil Rajagopalan, State University at Campinas, Brazil