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BookDOI

Linguistic Human Rights: Overcoming Linguistic Discrimination.

TLDR
The authors analyzes language rights in many countries worldwide, including North and Latin America, several European states, the former USSR, India, Kurdistan, Australia and New Zealand, and suggests which linguistic rights should be regarded as basic human rights.
Abstract
Only a few hundred of the world's 6,000-7,000 languages have any kind of official status, and it is only speakers of official languages (speakers of dominant majority languages) who enjoy all linguistic human rights. As many of the collected papers in this book document, most linguistic minorities are deprived of these rights. This book describes what linguistic human rights are, who has and who does not have them and why, and suggests which linguistic rights should be regarded as basic human rights. Linguistic Human Rights introduces a new area, combining sociolinguistics, educational, and minority concerns with human rights. Discrimination against language minorities is widespread, despite national and international law prohibiting this. The book analyzes language rights in many countries worldwide, including North and Latin America, several European states, the former USSR, India, Kurdistan, Australia and New Zealand.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Unpeeling the Onion: Language Planning and Policy and the ELT Professional

TL;DR: The authors examine how ELT professionals are already actively engaged in deciding language policies, how they promote policies reaffirming or opposing hierarchies of power that reflect entrenched historical and institutional beliefs, and how they might affect changes in their local contexts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bilingualism, Heritage Language Learners, and SLA Research: Opportunities Lost or Seized?

TL;DR: This article explored possible intersections between SLA and the area of language instruction currently referred to as the teaching of heritage languages and discussed the ways in which the opportunity of broadening SLA-and-instruction research can be seized by current researchers so that it can address the most intractable educational problems involving language.
Book

Saving Languages: An Introduction to Language Revitalization

TL;DR: Language revitalization as a global issue, issues in language revitalization, and models for revitalization are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Language Rights and Political Theory

TL;DR: This chapter examines why political theorists have started to explore the justifications for minority language rights claims, and to consider how different models of language rights relate to broader political theories of justice, freedom, and democracy.