The last few decades have seen a stretching and exchange of local, regional and national languages, identities, cultures, and economies worldwide as a consequence of globalisation and technology development. Significantly, the languages of the Middle East, Africa, Asia, the Netherlands, Scandinavia, Eastern Europe and Russia have been attracting increasing strategic, commercial and civic attention. Collectively referred to as Languages of the Wider World (LWW), these languages are important given the emergence of new centres of capital and cultural accumulation in the 21st century, such as...
The last few decades have seen a stretching and exchange of local, regional and national languages, identities, cultures, and economies worldwide a...