ABSTRACT

Addressing a wide range of issues in applied linguistics, sociolinguistics, and multilingualism,  this volume focuses on language users, the ‘people.’ Making creative connections between existing scholarship in language policy and contemporary theory and research in other social sciences, authors from around the world offer new critical perspectives for analyzing language phenomena and language theories, suggesting new meeting points among language users and language policy makers, norms, and traditions in diverse cultural, geographical, and historical contexts. 

Identifying and expanding on previously neglected aspects of language studies, the book is inspired by the work of Elana Shohamy, whose critical view and innovative work on a broad spectrum of key topics in applied linguistics has influenced many scholars in the field to think “out of the box” and to reconsider some basic commonly held understandings, specifically with regard to the impact of language and languaging on individual language users rather than on the masses.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

A Portrait of the Researcher in a Never-Ending Journey

part 1|83 pages

Restoring People to Language Assessment

chapter 3|12 pages

In the Name of the CEFR

Individuals and Standards

chapter 4|13 pages

Acknowledging the Diversity of the Language Learner Population in Australia

Towards Context-Sensitive Language Standards

chapter 5|16 pages

Students' Voices

The Challenge of Measuring Speaking for Academic Contexts

chapter 6|11 pages

Ethical Codes and Responsibility

part 2|55 pages

Focusing on People in Language Policy

chapter 8|14 pages

English in Ethiopia

Making Space for the Individual in Language Policy

chapter 10|13 pages

Refugees in Canada

On the Loss of Social Capital

part 3|83 pages

Personalizing the Public Space

chapter 12|12 pages

“We are Not really a Mixed City”—A De-Jure Bilingual Linguistic Landscape

The Case of Jewish-Arab Mixed Cities in Israel

chapter 14|18 pages

Hebrew in the North American Linguistic Landscape

Materializing the Sacred

chapter 15|18 pages

Welcome

Synthetic Personalization and Commodification of Sociability in the Linguistic Landscape of Global Tourism

part 4|90 pages

Placing People within Communities and Cultures

chapter 16|10 pages

A Researcher's Auto-Socioanalysis

Making Space for the Personal

chapter 17|14 pages

Understanding the Holocaust

A Personal History, Critical Literacy Analysis of a Gestapo File

chapter 18|11 pages

Language Experience Changes Language and Cognitive Ability

Implications for Social Policy

chapter 21|15 pages

Examining Markers of Identity Construction in English Language Learning

Some Implications for Palestinian-Israeli and Jewish-israeli Language Learners