Publications
Salawu, Abiodun and Phillip Mpofu. 2019. Interrogating the Autonomy of Previously Marginalised Languages in Zimbabwe's Indigenous-Language Press. Language Matters: Studies in the Languages of Africa 50 (1) : 25–44. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Davis, Christina P. 2018. Muslims in Sri Lankan language politics: A study of Tamil- and English-medium education. International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2018 (253) : 125–148. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Karlander, David. 2018. State categories, state vision and vernacular woes in Sweden’s language politics. Language Policy 17 (3) : 343–363. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Grin, François and Peter A. Kraus, eds. 2018. The Politics of Multilingualism. Europeanisation, globalisation and linguistic governance. (Studies in World Language Problems 6). John Benjamins. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Rajagopalan, Kanavillil. 2017. Prescription, language politics and the field of applied linguistics: A tribute to Prof. Alan Davies. Language & Communication 57 : 22–28. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Ó Murchadha, Noel P. 2016. The efficacy of unitary and polynomic models of codification in minority language contexts: ideological, pragmatic and pedagogical issues in the codification of Irish. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 37 (2) : 199–215. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Horner, Kristine. 2015. Language regimes and acts of citizenship in multilingual Luxembourg. Journal of Language and Politics 14 (3) : 359–381. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Hussain, Serena. 2015. Missing from the ‘minority mainstream’: Pahari-speaking diaspora in Britain. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 36 (5) : 483–497. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Kamwendo, Gregory Hankoni. 2015. From the Chichewa Board to the Centre for Language Studies: a Critique of a Malawian Language Academy. Language Matters: Studies in the Languages of Africa 46 (3) : 407–417. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Moore, Robert. 2015. From revolutionary monolingualism to reactionary multilingualism: Top-down discourses of linguistic diversity in Europe, 1794-present. Language & Communication 44 : 19–30. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Tupas, T. Ruanni F. 2015. The politics of ‘p’ and ‘f’: a linguistic history of nation-building in the Philippines. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 36 (6) : 587–597. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Vessey, Rachelle. 2015. Food fight: conflicting language ideologies in English and French news and social media. Journal of multicultural discourses 10 (2) : 253–271. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Rutten, Gijsbert and Rik Vosters. 2015. Three Southern shibboleths. Spelling features as conflicting identity markers in the Low Countries. Written Language & Literacy 18 (2) : 260–274. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Stroud, Christopher and Quentin Emmanuel Williams. 2015. Linguistic citizenship. Language and politics in postnational modernities. Journal of Language and Politics 14 (3) : 406–430. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Balockaite, Rasa. 2014. On Ideology, Language, and Identity: Language Politics in the Soviet and Post-Soviet Lithuania. Language Policy 13 (1) : 41–61. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Ives, Peter. 2014. De-politicizing language: obstacles to political theory’s engagement with language policy. Language Policy 13 (4) : 335–350. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)