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Multilingualism in Europe

A Case Study organized by the Madariaga European Foundation

by Lorna Carson (Volume editor)
©2003 Monographs 122 Pages

Summary

The important question of how to bring the European Union closer to its citizens is bound up with the issue of how individuals, groups and nation states express and assert identity, with one of the fundamental challenges how to approach and deal with multilingual communication.
This study assesses language use in a multilingual trans-European speech community. It examines language learning at school, university and elsewhere, languages spoken at home and in the workplace, and speakers' attitudes towards language learning and future linguistic solutions in Europe. The speech community selected for the case study are graduates of the College of Europe, a postgraduate institution of European Studies. Amongst other questions, this publication asks why these particular speakers are multilingual, and whether a two-tier Europe is developing in terms of foreign language skills. Using the case study as a point of departure for further discussion, the author explores how a balance may be achieved between managing effective communication between speakers, whilst maintaining the right of the individuals to use their own mother tongue.

Details

Pages
122
Year
2003
ISBN (Softcover)
9789052019956
Language
English
Keywords
multilinguism europe social Foreign language learning - Language use and choice Language attitudes Sociolinguistics
Published
Bruxelles, Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2003, 2005. 122 pp., 11. fig. and 5 tables

Biographical notes

Lorna Carson (Volume editor)

The Editor: Lorna Carson is a researcher with the Madariaga European Foundation. A graduate of the College of Europe in Bruges where her research focused on foreign language education in the United Kingdom, she is also a Doctoral Research Student at the Centre for Language and Communication Studies at Trinity College, Dublin.

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Title: Multilingualism in Europe