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Last update:
2 September 2010

© John Benjamins
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Multilingual, Globalizing Asia

Implications for policy and education

AILA Review, Volume 22

Edited by Lisa Lim and Ee-Ling Low
University of Hong Kong / National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

2009. iv, 130 pp.
Publishing status: Available

PaperbackIn stock
978 90 272 3994 5 / EUR 93.00 / USD 140.00
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This special issue has Asia as its focus, springboarding primarily from the multilingual reality that defines South and Southeast Asia, but also including the regions of East Asia normally considered more monolingual. The collection of articles addresses the tensions involved in how the countries position the English language even as they maintain and manage their own endogenous language(s), critically considering issues concerning plurilingual practices long existing in the region, the consequences of post-independence official language and medium of instruction choices, as well as the situation of minority communities who tend to fall out of official consideration, highlighting the interesting disjuncts between official discourse and community practice that often exist, and the implications that thus arise, particularly for policy and education. While English holds great import as a former colonial language and/ or a most valuable commodity in this age of globalization, it also becomes evident that, particularly in East and Southeast Asia, Mandarin may indeed be another force to be reckoned with.


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