Language maintenance and re-creation are burning issues for many indigenous communities around the world. Child language acquisition and socialization are processes integral to understanding these issues. In order to design realistic language recreation projects, research must first address the many factors impacting the acquisition and maintenance of a language by children. This dissertation shows how different contexts, historical, environmental, interactional, relate to Kaska language socialization and acquisition. Kaska is a Northern Athabaskan language spoken in the Yukon Territory (Canada). In particular, it shows how the shift from Kaska being a language of everyday communication to one associated with authority and respect constrain...
This thesis addresses how stakeholders of Kaska, a Dene Athabaskan language spoken in northeastern B...
This thesis / dissertation was completed and submitted at Nipissing University, and is made freely a...
This paper reports on a study in two remote multilingual Indigenous Australian communities: Yakanarr...
The Kaska language is a critically endangered Athabaskan language spoken in the southeast Yukon and ...
In this dissertation I examine the modes of post-rupture claiming, maintaining, and re-shaping of th...
As Indigenous communities seek to revitalize their ancestral tongues through second language learnin...
This thesis is a study of language use and language socialization practices in Northern Quebec. The ...
This article compares the functional roles of English, French, and Inuttitut in arctic Qué-bec. In t...
This dissertation is the product of research on the current usage of Kwalcwala, a language of the n...
This study examines the cultural and linguistic background of Saulteaux Indian children and its rela...
This dissertation initially reviews the literature on Indigenous language planning (LP) with an emph...
Social scientists have in recent years devoted a good deal of attention to the role of language in t...
This thesis reports on an ethnographic study of communicative interaction between young Inuit childr...
The Pacific Coast Athabaskan (PCA) languages are part of the Athabaskan language family, one of the ...
peer reviewedThis study investigates the intersection of family language policy with Indigenous mult...
This thesis addresses how stakeholders of Kaska, a Dene Athabaskan language spoken in northeastern B...
This thesis / dissertation was completed and submitted at Nipissing University, and is made freely a...
This paper reports on a study in two remote multilingual Indigenous Australian communities: Yakanarr...
The Kaska language is a critically endangered Athabaskan language spoken in the southeast Yukon and ...
In this dissertation I examine the modes of post-rupture claiming, maintaining, and re-shaping of th...
As Indigenous communities seek to revitalize their ancestral tongues through second language learnin...
This thesis is a study of language use and language socialization practices in Northern Quebec. The ...
This article compares the functional roles of English, French, and Inuttitut in arctic Qué-bec. In t...
This dissertation is the product of research on the current usage of Kwalcwala, a language of the n...
This study examines the cultural and linguistic background of Saulteaux Indian children and its rela...
This dissertation initially reviews the literature on Indigenous language planning (LP) with an emph...
Social scientists have in recent years devoted a good deal of attention to the role of language in t...
This thesis reports on an ethnographic study of communicative interaction between young Inuit childr...
The Pacific Coast Athabaskan (PCA) languages are part of the Athabaskan language family, one of the ...
peer reviewedThis study investigates the intersection of family language policy with Indigenous mult...
This thesis addresses how stakeholders of Kaska, a Dene Athabaskan language spoken in northeastern B...
This thesis / dissertation was completed and submitted at Nipissing University, and is made freely a...
This paper reports on a study in two remote multilingual Indigenous Australian communities: Yakanarr...