All Stories

  1. Beyond economy and culture: language-in-education preferences of Malaysian youth
  2. “An unrealistic expectation”: Māori youth on indigenous language purism
  3. Forging and negating diasporic linguistic citizenship in ethnocratic Malaysia
  4. Between public perception and government intent in national language policy
  5. Linguistic landscape and metalinguistic talk about societal multilingualism
  6. “If We Lose Their Language We Lose Our History”: Knowledge and Disposition in Māori Language Acquisition Policy
  7. How folk linguistic methods can support critical sociolinguistics
  8. The widening gap between Malaysia’s international tourism brand and domestic multicultural policy
  9. Mother tongues and languaging in Malaysia: Critical linguistics under critical examination
  10. A typology of arguments for and against bilingual place-naming in Aotearoa New Zealand
  11. Defining Māori language revitalisation: A project in folk linguistics
  12. The power of folk linguistic knowledge in language policy
  13. An old problem with new directions: Māori language revitalisation and the policy ideas of youth
  14. Collective (white) memories of Māori language loss (or not)
  15. Objectives at the crossroads: Critical theory and self-determination in indigenous language revitalization
  16. National language policy theory: exploring Spolsky’s model in the case of Iceland
  17. Your language or ours? Inclusion and exclusion of non-indigenous majorities in Māori and Sámi language revitalization policy