Towards a multilingual modus operandi in the European Union

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7203/Just.2.24859

Keywords:

Multilingualism, European Union, language policy, translation, intercomprehension, linguistic justice.

Abstract

Multilingualism is one of the pillars of the European Union (EU), enshrined in its treaties and celebrated in its motto, “united in diversity.” Yet multilingualism no longer has its own portfolio in the Commission, having been systematically downgraded and now being under the auspices of the Directorate-General for Translation, a directorate which nevertheless does not have a unit dedicated to multilingualism. Moreover, with the rise of English as the EU’s unofficial lingua franca, increasingly more material is produced in English and not translated at all. Therefore, we should ask ourselves whether the EU’s de facto linguistic and translation regimes are not at odds with the treaties. Drawing together transdisciplinary threads chiefly from linguistics, political science and political philosophy, this paper assesses the EU’s current linguistic regime, while looking at different models of linguistic justice, language rights, and the value of language to propose a new linguisticmodus operandi for the EU, grounded in (1) a language, (2) a translation, and (3) a cultural turn. 

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Author Biography

Alice Leal, University of the Witwatersrand  

Department of Translation and Interpreting Studies

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Published

2023-04-27

How to Cite

Leal, Alice. 2023. “Towards a Multilingual Modus Operandi in the European Union”. Just. Journal of Language Rights & Minorities, Revista De Drets Lingüístics I Minories 2 (1):149-76. https://doi.org/10.7203/Just.2.24859.
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Rights, Language Regimes, and Language Policy: An International Perspective

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