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dc.contributor.editorRICHTER, Dagmar
dc.contributor.editorRICHTER, Ingo
dc.contributor.editorTOIVANEN, Reetta
dc.contributor.editorULASIUK, Iryna
dc.date.accessioned2012-11-12T09:28:06Z
dc.date.available2012-11-12T09:28:06Z
dc.date.issued2012
dc.identifier.citationOisterwijk, Wolf Legal Publishers (WLP)/Berlin, Berliner Wissenschaftsverlag, 2012, Recht der Jugend und Bildungswesens (RdJB), 4en
dc.identifier.isbn9789058508829
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/24374
dc.description.abstractLinguistic autonomy, assured internationally to ethnic minorities, has succeeded, above all, in Europe, yet is nowhere near passing its acid test in other parts of the world. Examples show that it is not only a question of linguistic autonomy, but of ethnic and religious conflicts, which are simmering in the foreground. Hence, there are reasons for doubting whether international agreements designed to guarantee linguistic autonomy can solve these conflicts. The protection of indigenous languages is justified largely by the principle of diversity and is derived from ecological principles. However, only people who wish to take advantage of their rights will succeed in safeguarding these rights. A language that nobody speaks or wants to speak will die. Biologists have convinced us that biodiversity preserves the balance of life on earth, cultural theoreticians however have yet to deliver evidence to this effect. Global migration has now created further problems for language regimes in many different countries. These global migration processes are creating linguistically heterogeneous populations in many countries for which the law has not created appropriate language regimes. Global communication obeys rules that differ greatly from the methods used in teaching foreign languages at school. The English used in global communication is not the “academic English” that is taught at school, but something very different: a language that has evolved within the context of global communication. This development allows people to create languages flexibly and inventively. It cannot, however, be grasped with the existing conception of language rights. Language rights have appeared so far in two different forms, namely: as the legal basis of self-government, and as the legal basis of individual human rights. Considering the challenges by global migration and communication, far too much is expected of the first of the two aspects and that it is, therefore, unsuitable for solving the problems. Universally valid individual human rights definitely contain the potential for supporting what is an essential revision of language rights.en
dc.description.tableofcontents• Introduction / Ingo Richter -- • Language as a right in international law : limits and potentials / Fernanad de Varennes -- • Protecting language rights within the human rights system of the Council of Europe / Norman Weiss -- • Art. 22 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights and the diversity of languages / Jörg Ennuschat, Enrico Tille -- • The EU principle of integral multilingualism : on the road towards expansion or restriction? / Kerstin Odendahl, Jan Scheffler -- • Language rights in the world polity : from non-discrimination to multilingualism / Dominik Bohl -- • Immigrants and their children : a historical perspective / Charles Glenn -- • Integration through language : under the guiding principle of reciprocity : the case of Germany / Jutta Limbach -- • Multiple minorities or plurilingual learners? : allophone immigrant children's language education rights in Canada / Gail Prasad -- • Language rights and linguistic minorities / Ingrid Gogolin, Stefan Oeter -- • A reaction to Gogolin and Oeter / Hartmut Esser -- • The place of language law in communicative space (and the challenge posed by migration) / Thomas Krefeld -- • Do you speak Swiss? : the rights and obligations of members of new linguistic minorities in a multilingual immigration society / Jörg Künzli, Alberto Achermann -- • Minority schooling in Germany / Thede Boysen -- • The use of language education in Belgium / Gracienne Lawers -- • Linguistic minorities in Spain / Xabier Arzoz -- • Linguistic pluralism and citizenship in Romania / Dragoș Dragoman -- • Education challenges in the Raramuri indigenous community : the bicultural-bilingual approach / Guillermo Guajardo -- • Linguistic minorities and social inequality / Jessica Sperling -- • The legal regulation of linguistic diversity in television and radio broadcasting in Russia / Iryna Ulasiuk -- • Thirty six million language pairs / Thomas Petzold -- • Conclusions / Ingo Richter.
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherWLPen
dc.titleLanguage Rights Revisited: The challenge of global migration and communicationen
dc.typeBooken
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