Journalartikel

Managing and Investing in Hybrid Identities in the Globalized United Arab Emirates


AutorenlisteLeimgruber, Jakob R. E.; Al-Issa, Ahmad; Lorenz, Eliane; Siemund, Peter

Jahr der Veröffentlichung2022

ZeitschriftJournal of Language, Identity and Education

ISSN1534-8458

eISSN1532-7701

Open Access StatusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1080/15348458.2022.2070849

VerlagTaylor and Francis Group


Abstract
The United Arab Emirates have long been in contact with English. Its economy requires high rates of migration, resulting in large numbers of migrants who impact the local linguistic ecology. English acts as lingua franca and occurs in several forms, as labour is recruited from nations having experienced British or American influences. Arabic is used at home by Emiratis and Arab expatriates. However, it faces pressure from English both in education and at home, where shifts towards English occur. This study focusses on the interaction and competition between English and Arabic among university students. Qualitative results from a mixed methods survey suggest that while Arabic gets high solidarity ratings for "cultural identity," English rates higher for "individual identity." Status measures tend to align in both languages. Gender and citizenship had little effect, unlike self-assessed proficiency in both languages. Overall, English and Arabic are competitive in some areas, but also complementary.



Zitierstile

Harvard-ZitierstilLeimgruber, J., Al-Issa, A., Lorenz, E. and Siemund, P. (2022) Managing and Investing in Hybrid Identities in the Globalized United Arab Emirates, Journal of Language, Identity and Education. https://doi.org/10.1080/15348458.2022.2070849

APA-ZitierstilLeimgruber, J., Al-Issa, A., Lorenz, E., & Siemund, P. (2022). Managing and Investing in Hybrid Identities in the Globalized United Arab Emirates. Journal of Language, Identity and Education. https://doi.org/10.1080/15348458.2022.2070849



Schlagwörter


ArabicATTITUDESENGLISHlanguage attitudesLANGUAGESlanguage shiftMultilingualismUnited Arab Emirates


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