Edited by Probal Dasgupta (University
of Hyderabad) and Humphrey Tonkin (University of Hartford) – Book
Review Editors: Frank Nuessel & Renato Corsetti; Interlinguistics Editor:
Mark Fettes – Language Problems and Language Planning (LPLP) is
published by John
Benjamins in cooperation with the Center for Research and Documentation on World
Language Problems. This international multi-lingual journal publishes articles
primarily on political, sociological, and economic aspects of language and
language use. It is especially concerned with relationships between and among
language communities, particularly in international contexts, and in the
adaptation, manipulation, and standardization of language for international
use. Articles deal with language policy, language management, and language use
in international organizations, multinational enterprises, etc., and
theoretical studies on global communication, language interaction, and language
conflict.
The most recent issue of Language Problems & Language
Planning, 26:1 (2002), contains the
following articles:
Addressing counterterrorism:
Kurt E.
Müller (pp. 1–21)
The terrorist attacks of
Communication
linguistique: Étude comparative faite sur le terrain
[Linguistic communication:
A comparative field study]
Claude
Piron (pp. 23–50)
This article, written in French, examines four international language systems, the UN family of organizations, the multinationals, the European Union and the Esperanto organizations, with respect to a number of criteria including the duration of language learning expected of participants, costs of language learning to the organizations concerned, the State and the participants, communication delay involved in translation, and loss of information. The author concludes that unilingual systems, where only one language – be it Esperanto or English – is used, present the greatest advantages and the least disadvantages taken over the full set of criteria, but if certain factors, such as the equality among countries or the amount of time required to reach a reasonable level of competence, are taken into account, Esperanto comes out on top.
Direct
vs. indirect attitude measurement and the planning of Catalan in Mallorca
Felipe
Pieras-Guasp (pp. 51–68)
Studies of the sociolinguistic situation of Catalan have
generally concentrated on
The section dedicated to
Interlinguistics includes the article
Etimologia
in una lingua pianificata
[Etymology in a planned
language]
Carlo
Minnaja (pp. 69–75)
This article, written in Italian, discusses Ebbe Vilborg’s Etimologia Vortaro de Esperanto
[Etymological Dictionary of Esperanto], whose fifth and final volume (S-Z) was
published last year. While pointing out that the coverage of this dictionary is
limited in that it covers only roots approved by the
LPLP
26:1 also reviews a number of books of interest to interlinguists. The books
reviewed are:
Dennis Ager: Motivation in Language
Planning and Policy (reviewer: Joe Mac Donnacha)
William Eggington and Helen Wren (ed.): Language
Policy: Dominant English, Pluralist Challenges (reviewer: John Algeo)
Thom Huebner and Kathryn A. Davis (ed.): Sociopolitical
Perspectives on Language Policy and Planning in the USA (reviewer: Terry A.
Osborn)
Stephen May: Language and Minority
Rights: Ethnicity, Nationalism and the Politics of Language (reviewer:
François Grin)
Daniel Villa (ed.): Studies in
Language Contact: Spanish in the U. S. (reviewer: Frank Nuessel)
Hans P. Krings: Repairing Texts:
Empirical Investigations of Machine Translation Post-Editing Processes
(reviewer: Robert N. St. Clair)
Louis-Jean Calvet: La guerre des
langues et les politiques linguistiques (reviewer: Walter Żelazny)
Richard D. Lambert and Elana Shohamy
(eds.): Language Policy and Pedagogy: Essays in honor of A. Ronald Walton
(reviewer Christina L. Isabelli)
Glyn Williams and Delyth Morris: Language
Planning and Language Use: Welsh in a Global Age (reviewer: Piotr
Stalmaszczyk)