Urban Multilingualism in Europe: Immigrant Minority Languages at Home and School

Edited by: Guus Extra, Kutlay Yagmur

Format:
Paperback
Related Formats:
Ebook(PDF)
ISBN:
9781853597787
Published:
Publisher:
Multilingual Matters
Number of pages:
440
Dimensions:
210mm x 148mm
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Available

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This book focuses on the increase of urban multilingualism in Europe as a consequence of processes of migration and minorisation. It offers multidisciplinary, crossnational and crosslinguistic perspectives on immigrant minority languages at home and in school in six multicultural cities across Europe. In each of these cities, Germanic or Romance languages have a dominant status in public life. This Multilingual Cities Project is based on large-scale empirical findings and has been carried out under the auspices of the European Cultural Foundation, in Amsterdam.

Part I offers multidisciplinary background information on phenomenological, demographic, language rights and educational aspects of the status of immigrant minority communities and their languages in a variety of international contexts.

Part II offers methodological considerations on the Multilingual Cities Project. In addition, it presents both national and local perspectives on multilingualism in each of the six cities under consideration. Each chapter provides information on the distribution and vitality of immigrant minority languages spoken at home and on the status of these languages in primary and secondary schools.

Part III offers crossnational and crosslinguistic perspectives on the twenty most prominent languages that emerge from the study. The focus is again on the two major private and public domains in which language transmission may or may not occur: the home and the school, respectively. The book offers a challenging outlook on the educational management of language diversity in the increasingly multicultural and multilingual context of European nation-states.

Guus Extra studied applied linguistics and language development in Nijmegen, Stanford and Berkeley. He is director of Babylon, Centre for Studies of the Multicultural Society, at Tilburg University, The Netherlands and is Professor of Language and Minorities at the same university. He has been involved in studies on second language acquisition and first language maintenance and shift by immigrant minority groups in The Netherlands and abroad. He has published a variety of books and articles on these topics.

 

Kutlay Yağmur studied English as a second language and applied linguistics in Ankara and Sydney. He investigated language attrition and ethnolinguistic vitality of Turkish communities in Australia and Europe, and has published a number of books and articles on this subject. He worked at the Middle East Technical University in Ankara and is presently a senior researcher and lecturer at Babylon, Tilburg University.

1 Introduction
Guus Extra & Kutlay Yağmur: Part I Multidisciplinary perspectives
2 Phenomenological perspectives
3 Demographic perspectives
4 Language rights perspectives
5 Educational perspectives
Part II Multilingual Cities Project: national and local perspectives
6 Guus Extra, Kutlay Yağmur & Tim Van Der Avoird: Methodological considerations
7 Lilian Nygren-Junkin: Multilingualism in Göteborg
8 Sabine Bühler-Otten & Sara Fürstenau: Multilingualism in Hamburg
9 Rian Aarts, Guus Extra & Kutlay Yağmur: Multilingualism in The Hague
10 Marc Verlot & Kaat Delrue: Multilingualism in Brussels
11 Mehmet-Ali Akinci & Jan Jaap De Ruiter: Multilingualism in Lyon
12 Peter Broeder & Laura Mijares: Multilingualism in Madrid
Guus Extra, Kutlay Yağmur & Tim Van Der Avoird: Part III Multilingual Cities Project: crossnational and crosslinguistic perspectives
13 Crossnational perspectives on language groups
14 Crosslinguistic perspectives on language groups
15 Crossnational perspectives on community language teaching
16 Conclusions and discussion
Appendices

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