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Review: Dhaouadi, Mahmoud: The trapped Tunisian society's in cultural alienation: language handicap and troubled identity [in arabic]
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In: Society Register ; 2 ; 167-170 ; Dhaouadi, Mahmoud ; 2018 ; The trapped Tunisian society's in cultural alienation: language handicap and troubled identity [in arabic] ; Tunis ; El Atrash Publisher ; 978-9938-20-084-3 (2019)
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The (Diverse) Company You Keep: Content and Structure of Immigrants' Social Networks as a Window Into Intercultural Relations in Catalonia
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In: Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology ; 49 ; 6 ; 924-944 ; Europe's Culture(s): Negotiating Cultural Meanings, Values, and Identities in the European Context (2019)
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„wir streben schon in erster Linie an, dass man mit uns Deutsch spricht“
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Der öffentliche Raum als außerschulischer Lernort für die Anerkennung sprachlicher Vielfalt
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"Sprachliche Integration" zwischen Anspruch und Wirklichkeit
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Language planning and policy, law and (post)colonial relations in small Island States: a case study
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In: Social Inclusion ; 5 ; 4 ; 29-37 ; Multilingualism and Social Inclusion (2018)
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Abstract:
Language planning and policy (LPP) in postcolonial island states is often strongly (co)determined by the former colonizer's state tradition. Comparable to the examples of the development of LPP in Cabo Verde (Baptista, Brito & Bangura, 2010), Haiti (DeGraff, 2016), and Mauritius (Johnson, 2006; Lallmahomed-Aumeerally, 2005), this article aims to illustrate and explain in what way the current situation of the dominance of Dutch in governance, law and education in Aruba (and Curaçao) can only be explained through path dependency and state tradition (Sonntag & Cardinal, 2015) in which, time and again, critical junctures, have not led to decisions that favour the mother tongue of the majority of the population (Dijkhoff & Pereira, 2010; Mijts, 2015; Prins-Winkel, 1973; Winkel, 1955). In this article, three perspectives on LPP in small island states are explored as different aspects of the continuation of the former colonizer's state tradition and language regime. The first part will focus on the (non-)applicability of international treaties like the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages (ECRML) on the challenges of small island states. The point will be made that international treaties, like the ECRML, do not (currently) provide sufficient basis for the protection of languages in former colonial islands and for the empowerment of individuals through language rights. The second part explores the meaning of fundamental legal principles and specific demands, deduced from international treaties. The point will be made that the structure of the Kingdom of the Netherlands brings with it several limitations and obstacles for the autonomous development of LPP. The third part will focus on the way in which current Aruban legislation reflects the dominance of Dutch in governance, the judiciary and education. While bearing in mind that choices for legislation on language for governance, the judiciary and education are rooted in very diverse principles, a critical reading of existing legislation reveals an interesting dynamic of symbolic inclusive legislation and exclusive practices through language restrictions that favour the Dutch minority language. Recent research, however, demonstrates that law/policy and practice are not aligned, as such creating an incoherent situation that may call for a change in legislation and policy.
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Keyword:
Anthropologie; Bevölkerung; Kommunikationssoziologie; language policy; law; Minderheit; minority; Netherlands; Niederlande; planning; Planung; population; post-colonial society; postkoloniale Gesellschaft; Recht; Sociolinguistics; Sociology & anthropology; Sociology of Communication; Sociology of Language; Soziolinguistik; Soziologie; Sprachenpolitik; Sprachsoziologie; Tradition
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URL: https://doi.org/10.17645/si.v5i4.1134 https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/55472 https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/1134
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Culture, Lifestyle and the Information Revolution in the Middle East and Muslim World
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In: Journal of Cyberspace Studies ; 1 ; 89-102 (2018)
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Language planning and the issue of the Hungarian minority language in post-communist Romania: from exclusion to reasonable compromises
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In: Studia Politica: Romanian Political Science Review ; 18 ; 1 ; 121-140 (2018)
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Urban multilingualism and the civic university: a dynamic, non-linear model of participatory research
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In: Social Inclusion ; 5 ; 4 ; 5-13 ; Multilingualism and social inclusion (2018)
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Language Use and Social Inclusion in International Retirement Migration
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In: Social Inclusion ; 5 ; 4 ; 69-77 ; Multilingualism and Social Inclusion (2018)
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A unifying field in logics: book review
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In: International Letters of Social and Humanistic Sciences ; 43 ; 48-59 (2018)
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Raum erschreiben: Darstellung und Interpretation gesellschaftlicher Räume in literarischen Texten
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In: Gesellschaft in literarischen Texten: ein Lese- und Arbeitsbuch. Bd. 1: Raum und Zeit, soziale Ungleichheit, demografische und biologische Aspekte ; 15-32 (2018)
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Interculturalism and physical cultural diversity in the greater Toronto area
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In: Social Inclusion ; 5 ; 2 ; 111-119 ; Sport for social inclusion: questioning policy, practice and research (2018)
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Impressions of anglo-indian society in R. Kipling's early creative art
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In: International Letters of Social and Humanistic Sciences ; 71 ; 1-5 (2018)
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Nonverbale Begleitung des Sprachenwechsels bilingualer Italienerinnen und Italiener in Wien
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Die Repräsentation der Begriffe "Flüchtling" und "MigrantIn" in den österreichischen Printmedien
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