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Original scientific paper

SOCIOLINGUISTIC ECOLOGY IN INDIA: LANGUAGE POLICY AND ITS INFLUENCE ON LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY

Marijana Janjić orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-2296-7904


Full text: croatian pdf 633 Kb

page 184-202

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Abstract

Contemporary India is a heterogeneous multilingual state in which the languages of various language families are present. The Constitution of the Republic India and other documents regulate the use of languages in particular spheres of public communication. Yet the same documents do not create an egalitarian environment for the use of all languages in public communication. The paper summarizes how explicit language policy (regulations) reflect linguistic diversity and language hierarchy in India by appointing official languages in administration and legislative bodies and introducing a three-way formula into education. Comparative analysis of documents and language statistics from Census 2001 tries to reveal possible oversights. In the example of English and Hindi the paper concludes that the sociolinguistic pattern of power deployment and language hierarchy is inherited from the time before India was established as a republic.

Keywords

India; language policy; official languages; education; inherited sociolinguistic pattern

Hrčak ID:

193102

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/193102

Publication date:

15.12.2017.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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