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Globalization, Corporatism, and Critical Language Education
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Globalization, Corporatism, and Critical Language Education

Allan Luke, Carmen Luke and Philip Graham
International Multilingual Research Journal, Vol.1(1), pp.1-13
2007
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PDF - Author's Accepted Version61.08 kBDownloadView
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https://doi.org/10.1080/19313150709336861View
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Abstract

Linguistics globalization language planning language education critical literacy
This article explores the impacts of economic and cultural globalization on language and language education. It acknowledges the spread of English and the negative impacts of this upon other languages and language communities. The case is made that new conditions of economic dominance by multinational corporations raise the stakes for schooling and language education. These conditions have established a "new Latin" of technocratic English that services and obscures the corporate order. It argues for the continuing importance of the state and state schooling and the expansion of the definitions and practices of critical language and literacy education.

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Domestic collaboration
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Education & Educational Research
Language & Linguistics
Linguistics
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