Aims and objectives: This paper investigates how children in multilingual and transnational families mobilise their multiple and developing linguistic repertoires creatively to assert their agency in language use and socialisation, and why these acts of agency are conducive to successful maintenance of the so-called “home”, “community” or “minority” language. Methodology: Close, qualitative analysis of mealtime multiparty conversations is carried out to examine children’s agency in language use and socialisation. Data and analysis: Twelve hours of mealtime conversations within one Arabic and English speaking multilingual family in the UK were recorded over a period of eight months. The excerpts selected for analysis in this paper illu...
This article describes the newly emerging field of family language policy, defined as explicit and o...
peer reviewedDrawing on two longitudinal case-studies, this study aimed to identify some salient cha...
In their position paper on Language and Superdiversity, Blommaert & Rampton (2011) point out that si...
Abstract Aims and objectives: This paper investigates how children in multilingual and transnational...
This paper discusses the ways in which members of an Arabic-English speaking family under study use ...
This paper discusses the ways in which members of an Arabic-English speaking family under study use ...
In the UK different types of bi/ multilingual families have created unprecedented cultural and lingu...
Existing family language policy (FLP) scholarship has been criticised for insufficiently addressing ...
Study of family language policy unites research in child language acquisition and language policy to...
This article contributes to a dialogue between childhood studies and the sociolinguistic subfield ‘F...
My doctoral thesis focuses on eight children’s multilingual practices in the four institutions parti...
The present study explores language socialization patterns in a Persian-Kurdish family in Sweden and...
Studies on translanguaging suggest that opportunities to use languages flexibly in the classroom may...
This paper summarizes data from two case studies of how two families enact language policies with th...
Parents of transnational sojourner families, who stay temporarily in a country other than their own,...
This article describes the newly emerging field of family language policy, defined as explicit and o...
peer reviewedDrawing on two longitudinal case-studies, this study aimed to identify some salient cha...
In their position paper on Language and Superdiversity, Blommaert & Rampton (2011) point out that si...
Abstract Aims and objectives: This paper investigates how children in multilingual and transnational...
This paper discusses the ways in which members of an Arabic-English speaking family under study use ...
This paper discusses the ways in which members of an Arabic-English speaking family under study use ...
In the UK different types of bi/ multilingual families have created unprecedented cultural and lingu...
Existing family language policy (FLP) scholarship has been criticised for insufficiently addressing ...
Study of family language policy unites research in child language acquisition and language policy to...
This article contributes to a dialogue between childhood studies and the sociolinguistic subfield ‘F...
My doctoral thesis focuses on eight children’s multilingual practices in the four institutions parti...
The present study explores language socialization patterns in a Persian-Kurdish family in Sweden and...
Studies on translanguaging suggest that opportunities to use languages flexibly in the classroom may...
This paper summarizes data from two case studies of how two families enact language policies with th...
Parents of transnational sojourner families, who stay temporarily in a country other than their own,...
This article describes the newly emerging field of family language policy, defined as explicit and o...
peer reviewedDrawing on two longitudinal case-studies, this study aimed to identify some salient cha...
In their position paper on Language and Superdiversity, Blommaert & Rampton (2011) point out that si...