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Ana Tankosic; Eldin Milak; Carly Steele; Toni Dobinson – Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 2024
AI potential to recolonise language practices by reproducing existing marginalisations in novel ways has already instilled fears of a 'contemporary dystopia' (Miras et al., 2022) -- a space of cultural and linguistic erasure. Accents represent a distinctive aspect of language practice associated with one's sociocultural, and ethno-racial…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Conflict, Resilience (Psychology), Systems Approach
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Marshall, Norma; Antoine, Jurgita – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2023
Historical trauma began for Native people during European contact and the subsequent invasion of villages and cultural centers. Boarding school policies deliberately targeted Native families and social cohesion. The boarding school era was devastating to families and tribal entities as children were placed in institutions far away from their home…
Descriptors: American Indians, Indigenous Populations, Trauma, Empowerment
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Hamann, Edmund T.; Catalano, Theresa – Language Policy, 2021
Dual language (DL) programs propose to be vehicles of social justice and transformation by valuing an additional language other than the dominant one in a society and thereby contesting language hierarchies and the subordination of those who speak/use a non-dominant language (Flores, Flores, Educational Policy 30:13-38, 2016; Menken and GarcĂ­a,…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education Programs, Social Justice, Native Language, Second Language Learning
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Haque, Eve; Patrick, Donna – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2015
This paper addresses language policy and policy-making in Canada as forms of discourse produced and reproduced within systems of power and racial hierarchies. The analysis of indigenous language policy to be addressed here focuses on the historical, political and legal processes stemming from the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism…
Descriptors: Canada Natives, Indigenous Populations, Bilingualism, Cultural Pluralism
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Albury, Nathan John – Critical Inquiry in Language Studies, 2015
Indigenous language revitalization is a popular focus of critical theorists. From the perspective of sociolinguists, critical theory interrogates language policies to name and shame inequalities and propose solutions to correct injustices and emancipate the disadvantaged. From a broader perspective, language revitalization policy also resides…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Language Planning, Language Maintenance, Self Determination
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Gayman, Jeffry – Intercultural Education, 2011
Several years have passed since the adoption by the United Nations of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP). Yet, what changes have happened in the lives of Indigenous peoples for whom the Declaration was written? This paper employs a framework of Indigenous educational theory to focus on the case of the Ainu of Japan and…
Descriptors: Expertise, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Educational Theories
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Syed, Khalida Tanvir – Policy Futures in Education, 2010
This article discusses the implications and complexities of Canada's multicultural policies for aboriginal students in its post-secondary education systems. The author, a Pakistani-Canadian multicultural educator, interviewed an Aboriginal-Canadian multicultural educator, to discuss the cultural differences, divisions, and resistances between…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Immigrants, Educational Policy, Multicultural Education