Journal of Language and Social Psychology | 2019

Assessing 40 Years of Group Vitality Research and Future Directions

 
 
 
 

Abstract


This article provides key group vitality concepts followed by a selective overview of four decades of research on vitality issues. Group vitality is what makes language communities behave as distinctive and active collective entities within multilingual settings. Three structural factors combine to foster strong to weak group vitality: demographic factors, institutional support, and status. The objective vitality framework uses available census and sociolinguistic indicators to measure the relative vitality of minority and majority language communities in contact. Two case studies show the crucial role of language policies in improving or undermining the vitality of language minorities in Canada. Studies of subjective perceptions of group vitality are reviewed as they relate to language and communicative outcomes. Key vitality models are noted along with future research directions highlighting the need for a theoretical integration of the vitality framework.

Volume 38
Pages 409 - 422
DOI 10.1177/0261927X19868974
Language English
Journal Journal of Language and Social Psychology

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