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This volume introduces a strategic interdisciplinary research
agenda on arrival infrastructures. Arrival infrastructures are
those parts of the urban fabric within which newcomers become
entangled on arrival, and where their future local or translocal
social mobilities are produced as much as negotiated. Challenging
the dominance of national normativities, temporalities, and
geographies of "arrival," the authors scrutinize the position and
potential of cities as transnationally embedded places of arrival.
Critically interrogating conceptions of migrant arrival as oriented
towards settlement and integration, the volume directs attention to
much more diverse migration trajectories that shape our cities
today. Each chapter examines how migrants, street-level
bureaucrats, local residents, and civil society actors build-with
the resources they have at hand-the infrastructures that
accommodate, channel, and govern arrival.
A first synthesis of work done in sociolinguistic superdiversity,
this volume offers a substantial introduction to the field and the
issues and state-of-the-art research papers organized around three
themes: Sketching the paradigm, Sociolinguistic complexity,
Policing complexity. The focus is to show how complexity rather
than plurality can serve as a lens through which an equally vast
range of topics, sites, and issues can be tied together.
Superdiversity captures the acceleration and intensification of
processes of social 'mixing' and 'fragmentation' since the early
1990s, as an outcome of two different but related processes: new
post-Cold War migration flows, and the advent and spread of the
Internet and mobile technologies. The confluence of these forces
have created entirely new sociolinguistic environments, leading to
research in the past decade that has brought a mixture of new
empirical terrain-extreme diversity in language and literacy
resources, complex repertoires and practices of participants in
interaction-and conceptual challenges. Language and Superdiversity
is a landmark volume bringing together the work of the scholars and
researchers who spearhead the development of the sociolinguistics
of superdiversity.
A first synthesis of work done in sociolinguistic superdiversity,
this volume offers a substantial introduction to the field and the
issues and state-of-the-art research papers organized around three
themes: Sketching the paradigm, Sociolinguistic complexity,
Policing complexity. The focus is to show how complexity rather
than plurality can serve as a lens through which an equally vast
range of topics, sites, and issues can be tied together.
Superdiversity captures the acceleration and intensification of
processes of social 'mixing' and 'fragmentation' since the early
1990s, as an outcome of two different but related processes: new
post-Cold War migration flows, and the advent and spread of the
Internet and mobile technologies. The confluence of these forces
have created entirely new sociolinguistic environments, leading to
research in the past decade that has brought a mixture of new
empirical terrain-extreme diversity in language and literacy
resources, complex repertoires and practices of participants in
interaction-and conceptual challenges. Language and Superdiversity
is a landmark volume bringing together the work of the scholars and
researchers who spearhead the development of the sociolinguistics
of superdiversity.
This book is the fruition of five years' work in exploring the idea
of superdiversity. The editors argue that sociolinguistic
superdiversity could be a source of inspiration to a wide range of
post-structuralist, post-colonial and neo-Marxist interdisciplinary
research into the potential and the limits of human cultural
creativity and societal renewal under conditions of increasing and
complexifying global connectivity. Through case studies of language
practices in spaces understood as inherently translocal and
multi-layered (classrooms and schools, youth spaces, mercantile
spaces and nation-states), this book explores the relevance of
superdiversity for the social and human sciences and positions it
as a research perspective in sociolinguistics and beyond.
This volume introduces a strategic interdisciplinary research
agenda on arrival infrastructures. Arrival infrastructures are
those parts of the urban fabric within which newcomers become
entangled on arrival, and where their future local or translocal
social mobilities are produced as much as negotiated. Challenging
the dominance of national normativities, temporalities, and
geographies of "arrival," the authors scrutinize the position and
potential of cities as transnationally embedded places of arrival.
Critically interrogating conceptions of migrant arrival as oriented
towards settlement and integration, the volume directs attention to
much more diverse migration trajectories that shape our cities
today. Each chapter examines how migrants, street-level
bureaucrats, local residents, and civil society actors build-with
the resources they have at hand-the infrastructures that
accommodate, channel, and govern arrival.
This book is the fruition of five years' work in exploring the idea
of superdiversity. The editors argue that sociolinguistic
superdiversity could be a source of inspiration to a wide range of
post-structuralist, post-colonial and neo-Marxist interdisciplinary
research into the potential and the limits of human cultural
creativity and societal renewal under conditions of increasing and
complexifying global connectivity. Through case studies of language
practices in spaces understood as inherently translocal and
multi-layered (classrooms and schools, youth spaces, mercantile
spaces and nation-states), this book explores the relevance of
superdiversity for the social and human sciences and positions it
as a research perspective in sociolinguistics and beyond.
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