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E-grāmata: Standardizing Diversity: The Political Economy of Language Regimes

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Languages have deep political significance beyond communication: a common language can strengthen cultural bonds and social trust, or it may exacerbate cultural differences and power imbalances. Language regimes that emerge from political bargains can centralize power by favoring the language of one ethnolinguistic group, share power by recognizing multiple mother tongues, or neutralize power through the use of a lingua franca. Cultural egoism, communicative efficiency, or collective equality determines the choice. As Amy H. Liu demonstrates, the conditions surrounding the choice of a language regime also have a number of implications for a nation's economy.

Standardizing Diversity examines the relationship between the distribution of linguistic power and economic growth. Using a newly assembled dataset of all language-in-education policies in Asia from 1945 to 2005 and drawing on fieldwork data from Malaysia and Singapore, Liu shows language regimes that recognize a lingua franca exclusively—or at least above all others—tend to develop social trust, attract foreign investment, and stimulate economic growth. Particularly at high levels of heterogeneity, the recognition of a lingua franca fosters equality and facilitates efficiency. Her findings challenge the prevailing belief that linguistic diversity inhibits economic growth, suggesting instead that governments in even the most ethnically heterogeneous countries have institutional tools to standardize their diversity and to thrive economically.



Recenzijas

"A superb book, providing a richly documented, carefully reasoned, and innovative analysis of the economic imperative in the choice of language regimes. Addressing criteria of stability, efficiency, and inclusivity, and focusing especially on Asia, Amy Liu makes a convincing case for the role of lingua francas in power sharing and power neutralizing in multiethnic societies. It is a major contribution to the comparative study of the politics of language." (William Safran, University of Colorado at Boulder)

Papildus informācija

Using a newly assembled dataset and drawing on fieldwork data from Malaysia and Singapore, Liu finds that how linguistic power is distributedspecifically whether a lingua franca is recognized exclusively or above all otherscan generate social trust, attract foreign investment, and therefore indirectly promote economic growth.
Note About Interviews vii
Part I Toward a Typology of Language Regimes
1(50)
Chapter 1 Introduction
3(19)
Chapter 2 Typology of Language Regimes
22(29)
Part II Language Regime Choice
51(74)
Chapter 3 Language Regime Choice: Theory
53(29)
Chapter 4 Language Regime Choice: Evidence
82(43)
Part III Economic Effects of Language Regimes
125(88)
Chapter 5 Economic Effects of Language Regimes: Theory
127(20)
Chapter 6 Mechanism 1: Social Capital
147(29)
Chapter 7 Mechanism 2: Foreign Capital
176(27)
Chapter 8 Conclusion: Standardizing Diversity
203(10)
Notes 213(8)
References 221(24)
Index 245(10)
Acknowledgments 255
Amy H. Liu teaches government at the University of Texas at Austin.