Neoliberalism as language policy
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Abstract
Abstract This article explores how an economic ideology—neoliberalism—serves as a covert language policy mechanism pushing the global spread of English. Our analysis builds on a case study of the spread of English as a medium of instruction (MoI) in South Korean higher education. The Asian financial crisis of 1997/98 was the catalyst for a set of socioeconomic transformations that led to the imposition of “competitiveness” as a core value. Competition is heavily structured through a host of testing, assessment, and ranking mechanisms, many of which explicitly privilege English as a terrain where individual and societal worth are established. University rankings are one such mechanism structuring competition…
Citation impact
653
total citations
- FWCI
- 290.68
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 47
Citations per year
Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Neoliberalism (international relations)
- Ideology
- Sociology
- Competition (biology)
- Language policy
- Globalization
- Internationalization
- Privilege (computing)
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