This chapter studies multilingual democratic societies with highly developed economies. These societies are assumed to have two languages with official status: language A, spoken by every individual, and language B, spoken by the bilingual minority. We emphasize that language rights are important, but the survival of the minority language B depends mainly on the actual use bilinguals make of B. The purpose of the present chapter is to study some of the factors affecting the bilingual speakers language choice behaviour. Our view is that languages with their speech communities compete for speakers just as fi rms compete for market share. Thus, the con ict among the minority languages in these societies does not take the rough expressions suc...
This article discusses the adoption of a complexity theory approach to study the dynamics of languag...
Do languages matter beyond their communicative beneÖts? We explore the potential role of preferences...
In this paper we introduce a model of a society with two distinct linguistic groups, each consisting...
This chapter studies multilingual democratic societies with highly developed economies. These societ...
We study a society inside which two official languages, the majority language A and the minority lan...
Roughly one half of World's languages are in danger of extinction. The endangered languages, spoken ...
In the present chapter, we seek to understand the actual social use bilinguals make of a minority la...
In this paper we study a simple mathematical model of a bilingual community in which all agents are ...
We investigate a society with two official languages: A, shared by all individuals and B, spoken by ...
Natural languages with their speech communities tend to compete for speakers, very much like firms c...
We study the language choice behavior of bilingual speakers in modern societies, such as the Basque...
Natural languages with their speech communities tend to compete for speakers, very much like firms c...
Some bilingual societies exhibit a distribution of language skills that can- not be explained by eco...
Some bilingual societies exhibit a distribution of language skills that can- not be explained by eco...
© 2019 We study ethno-linguistic diversity in a lab-in-the-field experiment in two bilingual societi...
This article discusses the adoption of a complexity theory approach to study the dynamics of languag...
Do languages matter beyond their communicative beneÖts? We explore the potential role of preferences...
In this paper we introduce a model of a society with two distinct linguistic groups, each consisting...
This chapter studies multilingual democratic societies with highly developed economies. These societ...
We study a society inside which two official languages, the majority language A and the minority lan...
Roughly one half of World's languages are in danger of extinction. The endangered languages, spoken ...
In the present chapter, we seek to understand the actual social use bilinguals make of a minority la...
In this paper we study a simple mathematical model of a bilingual community in which all agents are ...
We investigate a society with two official languages: A, shared by all individuals and B, spoken by ...
Natural languages with their speech communities tend to compete for speakers, very much like firms c...
We study the language choice behavior of bilingual speakers in modern societies, such as the Basque...
Natural languages with their speech communities tend to compete for speakers, very much like firms c...
Some bilingual societies exhibit a distribution of language skills that can- not be explained by eco...
Some bilingual societies exhibit a distribution of language skills that can- not be explained by eco...
© 2019 We study ethno-linguistic diversity in a lab-in-the-field experiment in two bilingual societi...
This article discusses the adoption of a complexity theory approach to study the dynamics of languag...
Do languages matter beyond their communicative beneÖts? We explore the potential role of preferences...
In this paper we introduce a model of a society with two distinct linguistic groups, each consisting...