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OverviewInvites readers to question whether language planning and policy can survive decolonialization. This book represents a vital step forward in the process of decolonizing language policy and planning (LPP). It addresses both theoretical and practical aspects of LPP, while exploring its intersection with domains including security, politics and education. A decolonized LPP invites us to view language as an interconnected phenomenon, with boundaries that are not defined by structural, territorial, ethnic or historical limitations. The chapters in this book problematize the positivist, instrumental, pragmatic and technical dimensions of LPP, while offering a renewed perspective in dialogue with contemporary struggles and claims. It covers a range of geopolitical contexts, with particular attention to the dialogues and contradictions between the North and the South. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Sinfree Makoni , Cristine Gorski Severo , Ashraf Abdelhay , Alissa J. HartigPublisher: Channel View Publications Ltd Imprint: Multilingual Matters Dimensions: Width: 17.40cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 24.50cm Weight: 0.880kg ISBN: 9781836681922ISBN 10: 1836681925 Pages: 398 Publication Date: 13 January 2026 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsJosé del Valle: Preface Sinfree Bullock Makoni, Cristine Gorski Severo, Ashraf Abdelhay and Alissa J. Hartig: Introduction: Insecurities in Language Policy and Planning Chapter 1. Bernard Spolsky: Continued Thoughts on Language Policy Chapter 2. Michal Tannenbaum and Elana Shohamy: A New Multilingual Educational Policy in Israel: The Role of Research as a Contributing Factor Chapter 3. Rochelle Pinto: Becoming a Language of State Chapter 4. Ben Rampton, Daniel Silva and Constadina Charalambous: Sociolinguistics and Securitization as Another Mode of Governance Chapter 5. Nicholas Faraclas: Longue Durée and Durée Profonde: udumu, utu and Bringing Language Back to Earth Chapter 6. Joseph Gafaranga: Doing Translanguaging, Unknowingly and Differently Chapter 7. Chaoqun Lian: Metaphorical Language Policy and Language Politics in the Arabic-Speaking World Chapter 8. Yonatan Mendel: Arabic in Israel: The Consequences of Harnessing Language for Security Chapter 9. Yasir Suleiman-Malley: Language and Conflict in the Israeli-Palestinian Sphere: The View from Below Chapter 10. Folúkẹ́ Adébísí: [Un]making the Wretched of the Earth: Can We Aim Towards Testamentary Life Within Legal Knowledge? Chapter 11. David Karlander and Linus Salö: Historicizing ‘Semilingualism’: On the Theoretical Origins of a Linguistic Pathology Chapter 12. Frances Vavrus: Schooling as Uncertainty: An Ethnographic Memoir Chapter 13. Priyadarshani Joshi: An Exploration of the Causes and Consequences of Private Schooling Expansion: Global Trends and Research Findings from Nepal Chapter 14. Peter Mayo: 'Twenty Years' Engagement in Postcolonial Education: A Retrospective Chapter 15. Mama Adobea Nii Owoo: From Unarchiving to Unbooking: How the Film No Vernacular Rethinks Language Policy Research for Global South Ezra Nhampoca: EpilogueReviewsThis volume is a veritable tour de force. It brings out the complexities and pitfalls of Language Policy and Planning, starting with the pervasive slipperiness of key concepts found lacking in operational definition. The contributors highlight the significance of bringing into the equation the often-sidelined voices from the Global South. * Kanavillil Rajagopalan, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Brazil * This book practices decolonization as active, historical, situated praxis. With sharp insight and critical self-awareness, it challenges language policy and planning to reckon with their colonial inheritances, offering a transformative lens rooted in what decolonization does, rather than what it merely means. As such, it is mandatory reading for critical eyes in search of non-extractivist LPP built around notions of embodied knowledge and epistemologies of the Souths. * Clarissa Menezes Jordão * This volume, a fascinating decolonial project, brings together chapters designed to draw readers (in)to dialogue(s) with prominent academics on language planning and policy (LPP). While highlighting insecurities, violence and marginalisations in the ideologies and practices of the inherited Euro-American LPP, it provides novel perspectives and directions for decolonial LPP and research in the Global Souths. * Felix Banda, University of the Western Cape, South Africa * This volume is a veritable tour de force. It brings out the complexities and pitfalls of Language Policy and Planning, starting with the pervasive slipperiness of key concepts found lacking in operational definition. The contributors highlight the significance of bringing into the equation the often-sidelined voices from the Global South. * Kanavillil Rajagopalan, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Brazil * Author InformationSinfree Makoni is Director of African Studies, Liberal Arts Professor of African Studies and Applied Linguistics, The Pennsylvania State University, USA. Cristine Gorski Severo is an Associate Professor at Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil and a CNPq national Fellow. Ashraf Abdelhay works for the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, Qatar, as an Associate Professor in the program of Linguistics and Arabic Lexicography. Alissa J. Hartig is Associate Professor of Applied Linguistics, Portland State University, USA. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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