Chapter 1: Introduction.- Part 1: Communities.- Chapter 2: The geography of minority language use: from community to network.- Chapter 3: Minority languages in the age of networked individualism: from social networks to digital breathing spaces.- Chapter 4: Communities, networks and contemporary language revitalisation.- Part 2: Families.- Chapter 5: Family language policy and language transmission in times of change.- Chapter 6: Family language policy: promoting partnership in the early years to support heritage languages.- Chapter 7: Changes in family structure and lifestyles: challenges for regional or minority languages.- Part 3: Economy.- Chapter 8: The economics of ‘language[s] at work’: theory, hiring model and evidence.- Chapter 9: Gàidhlig, Gaeilge, Cymraeg and føroyskt mál: minority languages as economic assets?.- Chapter 10: Regional and minority languages and the economy: the evolution of structural and analytical challenges.- Part 4: Governance.- Chapter 11: The governance of language revitalisation: the case of Wales.- Chapter 12: The governance of Irish in the neoliberal age: the retreat of the state under the guise of partnership .- Chapter 13: Governance, policy-making and language revitalisation.- Chapter 14: Afterword: Forging hope in the company of cynics
Huw Lewis is Senior Lecturer in Politics at Aberystwyth University, UK.
Wilson McLeod is Professor of Gaelic at the University of Edinburgh, UK.
“The field of revitalisation research and practice has been waiting for this book. It is well known that we are seeing a surge in systematic efforts to revitalise, renovate, invigorate and generally to protect and defend small and threatened languages. All across the world optimism and hard work are put towards this important, humane, just and enriching activity. This book demonstrates convincingly how wide-ranging social, economic and institutional change creates new conceptual and practical challenges for the global revitalisation project.”
-Joseph Lo Bianco, University of Melbourne, Australia
This book brings together an interdisciplinary group of academic researchers in order to examine how and to what extent the challenge of language revitalisation should be reassessed and reconceptualised to take account of our fast-changing social context. The period of four decades between 1980 and 2020 that straddled the end of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-first is widely regarded as one that witnessed a series of fundamental social, economic and political transformations. Many societies have become increasingly individualistic, mobile and diverse in terms of ethnicity and identity; their economies have become increasingly interconnected; and their governance structures have become increasingly complex, incorporating a growing number of different levels and actors. In addition, rapid advancements with regard to automated, digital and communication technology have had a far-reaching impact on how people interact with each other and participate in society. The chapters in this book aim to advance an agenda of key questions that should concern those working in the field of language revitalisation over the coming years, and the volume will be of interest to students, scholars and policy-makers in related areas including sociolinguistics, education, sociology, geography, political science, law, economics, Celtic studies, and communication technology.
Huw Lewis is Senior Lecturer in Politics at Aberystwyth University, UK.
Wilson McLeod is Professor of Gaelic at the University of Edinburgh, UK.