ChairLinda Cardinal, University of Ottawa
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School of Political Studies 55, avenue Laurier Est University of Ottawa Ottawa (Ontario) K1N 6N5 Canada
William Safran, University of Colorado
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Department of Political Science University of Colorado at Boulder Ketchum 106 Boulder CO 80309-0333 USA OfficersJean Laponce, Secretary
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Department of Political Science University of British Columbia Vancouver V6T 1Z1 Canada BackgroundGranted research committee status in 2000; committee created in January 2001. ObjectivesVery generally, the purpose of the committee is to study the effects of language on politics and vice versa; more specifically to study :
1) Language planning by political authorities, planning intended to regulate either the corpus or the status of a language; 2) The political consequences of contact and competition among different languages at the institutional, local, national, regional, or global level.
Both states and languages are territorial 'animals'; both tend, for different reasons, to give themselves spatial boundaries. When these boundaries do not coincide (that is the most frequent case) tensions are likely to occur between culture and politics. These are the tensions to which we give most of our attention by studying the kinds of communication, competition, cooperation, and conflict that result from and are affected by the making and unmaking of language and political hierarchies. Websitehttp://www.politics.ubc.ca/laponce/language/
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