Maxi-Min Language Use A Critical Remark on a Concept by Philippe van Parijs

Philippe van Parijs explains in Linguistic Justice for Europe and for the World the concept of maxi-min language use as a process of language choice. He suggests that the language chosen as a common language should maximize the minimal competence of a community. Within a multilingual group of people...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kruse Jan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2016-10-01
Series:Acta Universitatis Sapientiae: European and Regional Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/auseur-2016-0009
Description
Summary:Philippe van Parijs explains in Linguistic Justice for Europe and for the World the concept of maxi-min language use as a process of language choice. He suggests that the language chosen as a common language should maximize the minimal competence of a community. Within a multilingual group of people, the chosen language is the language known best by a participant who knows it least. For obvious reasons, only English would qualify for having that status. This article argues that maxi-min is rather a normative concept, not only because the process itself remains empirically unfounded. Moreover, language choice is the result of complex social and psychological structures. As a descriptive process, the maxi-min choice happens in the reality fairly seldom, whereas the max-min use of languages seen as a normative process could be a very effective tool to measure linguistic justice.
ISSN:2068-7583