Language Policy /
Bernard Spolsky.
- 1st ed.
- New York, N.Y. : Cambridge University Press, 2004.
- xi, 250 p. : ill. ; 23 cm.
- Key Topics in Sociolinguistics .
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Language practices, ideology and beliefs, and management and planning 2. Driving out the bad 3. Pursuing the good and dealing with the new 4. The nature of language policy and its domains 5. Two monolingual polities - Iceland and France 6. How English spread 7. Does the US have a language policy or just civil rights? 8. Language rights 9. Monolingual polities under pressure 10. Monolingual polities with recognized linguistic minorities 11. Partitioning language space - two, three, many 12. Resisting language shift 13. Conclusions
"Language policy is an issue of critical importance in the world today. In this up-to-date 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 how to recognize language policies, and whether or not language can be managed at all." (Book Cover)
0521011752 (pbk)
Language policy. Language planning.
Langue, pouvoir et politiques identitaires : Le Canada et le monde--BIL 5508