Rethinking English as a lingua franca in scientific-academic contexts. A position statement.
Journal article, 2022

We aim to challenge assumptions made about the use of English as a “lingua franca” in scientific-academic contexts, identify the impact of such assumptions on trajectories of knowledge production and uptake, and legitimize the use of multiple languages for transnational scholarly exchange. We set out ten principles: Using English as a scientific-academic “lingua franca” does not always promote inclusion; A language positioned as a scientific-academic “lingua franca” can act as a language of domination; Positioning English as the “lingua franca” policy may discourage translations and exclude participation; Policies which position English as being the contemporary scientific-academic “lingua franca” may convey the idea that knowledge produced in English is the only knowledge that exists; The imposition of English as a presumed scientific-academic “lingua franca” is a manifestation of the unequal distribution of knowledge production and uptake; Languages/varieties function as powerful resources for knowledge making; Choosing a language for publishing or presenting is a sociolinguistic right; Choosing a language to publish or present in is a political act; Convention organizers should have the right to promote the language(s) of their choice; Convention organizers and scholars should be as creative and sensitive to including as diverse an audience as possible.

decoloniality

global knowledge making

sociolinguistic rights

language policies/politics

English for academic purposes

academic conferences

Author

Federico Navarro

O'Higgins University

Theresa Lillis

Open University

Tiane Donahue

Dartmouth College

Mary Jane Curry

University of Rochester

Natalia Ávila Reyes

Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile

Magnus Gustafsson

Chalmers, Communication and Learning in Science, Language and Communication

Virginia Zavala

Pontifical Catholic University of Peru

Daniela Lauría

Universidad de Buenos Aires

Annabelle Lukin

Macquarie University

Carolyn McKinney

University of Cape Town

Haiying Feng

University of International Business and Economics

Désirée Motta-Roth

Federal University of Santa Maria

Journal of English for Research Publication Purposes

25900994 (ISSN) 25901001 (eISSN)

Vol. 3 1 143-153

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

History of Ideas

General Language Studies and Linguistics

Specific Languages

Learning and teaching

Pedagogical work

DOI

10.1075/jerpp.21012.nav

More information

Latest update

10/5/2023