In all languages? How minority languages are excluded from scholarly publishing
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34742Dato
2024-01-23Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Grange, Huw RobertSammendrag
English may have become the lingua franca of academia, but there are good grounds for preserving
linguistic diversity in scholarly communication, including public engagement and impact generation at
a local level. Several initiatives have emerged in recent years that seek to promote multilingualism in
scholarly communication as an expression of bibliodiversity, among them the ‘In all languages’ campaign.
But to what extent are minority languages excluded from scholarly publishing infrastructure and
initiatives that seek to challenge Anglophonic hegemony? This is the provocative question we ask in this
opinion piece, drawing on our experience of publishing the world’s only academic journal in our minority
language. We draw attention to three challenges faced by publishers of minority-language academic
content: additional steps in the editorial workflow, exclusion from scholarly publishing infrastructure and
ineligibility to apply for funding. We end with a plea for a conception of ‘balanced multilingualism’ that
extends beyond ‘national’ languages other than English.
Forlag
Ubiquity PressSitering
Grange. In all languages? How minority languages are excluded from scholarly publishing. Insights: the UKSG journal. 2024;37(1)Metadata
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