Many African countries have undertaken transitions to democratic rule since the early 1990s. While giving many people the rare opportunity to vote in competitive and pluralistic elections, there have been limits to the empowering effects of these transitions for many. The paper argues that the continued use of English, French and Portuguese in state and academic activities has minimised the empowering effects of these democratic transitions. The use of such languages contributes critically to limiting the ability of many Africans lacking fluency in them to participate in two important moments that define the possibilitiesand limits of democratic decision-making. First, it limits their ability toparticipate in discourses that determine what ...
This introduction to the Special Edition provides a rationale for the inclusion of the selected arti...
Whether our concerns are about the everyday lives of people and their social interaction, or about s...
The underlying conception of African societies as societies of orality does not foreclose the possib...
Many African countries have undertaken transitions to democratic rule since the early 1990s. While g...
This publication comprises two papers, both written during January and February 2002 when the author...
In today\u27s globalization, French has experienced unprecedented circumstances with the rise of Eng...
Language is a means of communication but it also constitutes an essential element for the individual...
The pace at which African countries are developing has been in the spotlight for a long time, with m...
In the field of language and education, Senegal and the Gambia exemplify many of the problems facing...
Charles University This study deals with language policies in Africa with a special focus on multi-e...
Language has played a pivotal role in societal transformation in postcolonial Africa towards the cre...
Any African Studies discourse that overlooks the role and place of language would be incomplete beca...
In the years immediately following the attainment of independence, in the early 1960s for the most p...
The formulation of a language policy is critical to the development of every state. Choosing what la...
This paper addresses the politics of language use in African nations and societies. It highlights th...
This introduction to the Special Edition provides a rationale for the inclusion of the selected arti...
Whether our concerns are about the everyday lives of people and their social interaction, or about s...
The underlying conception of African societies as societies of orality does not foreclose the possib...
Many African countries have undertaken transitions to democratic rule since the early 1990s. While g...
This publication comprises two papers, both written during January and February 2002 when the author...
In today\u27s globalization, French has experienced unprecedented circumstances with the rise of Eng...
Language is a means of communication but it also constitutes an essential element for the individual...
The pace at which African countries are developing has been in the spotlight for a long time, with m...
In the field of language and education, Senegal and the Gambia exemplify many of the problems facing...
Charles University This study deals with language policies in Africa with a special focus on multi-e...
Language has played a pivotal role in societal transformation in postcolonial Africa towards the cre...
Any African Studies discourse that overlooks the role and place of language would be incomplete beca...
In the years immediately following the attainment of independence, in the early 1960s for the most p...
The formulation of a language policy is critical to the development of every state. Choosing what la...
This paper addresses the politics of language use in African nations and societies. It highlights th...
This introduction to the Special Edition provides a rationale for the inclusion of the selected arti...
Whether our concerns are about the everyday lives of people and their social interaction, or about s...
The underlying conception of African societies as societies of orality does not foreclose the possib...