DEV meet-up UiPath Document Understanding May 7 2024 Amsterdam
Theories of peace and conflict and their relationship
1. THEORIES OF PEACE AND
CONFLICT AND THEIR
RELATIONSHIP TO LANGUAGE
(FRIEDRICH, 2007)
Camila Araújo, Felipe Roque, Joana Dresch,
Nathalia Wichan, Norma Caldas and
Vinicius Lima
2. PEACE
Problems in defining what is peace.
Languages around the globe have different words
that can mean different kinds of peace: inner peace,
the absence of war and social justice.
The concept of peace in Friedrich's book intends to
merge all those definitions: “The exercising of freedom.
As long as such freedom do not impair the freedom of
others.”
3. PEACE
Negative peace is the
absence of war. A
state reached through
diplomacy and
negotiations.
Positive peace is
achieved through the
promotion of fair
social conditions. It is
more like a “peace
building” than a
restoration of peace.
These elements are also present in language's world.
English is an example. It is considered capable of
replacing other languages and it need to be “prevented”
from doing harm. That is negative peace in languages.
4. PEACE
Positive Peace Through English can be achieved
promoting pacific uses of English through:
Respect for the linguistic rights.
The maintenance of an ecology of language (in spite of
using English as a global language).
The maintenance of cultural and linguistic diversity
(the legitimization of different varieties of English).
Language education.
5. PEACE AND LANGUAGE/ENGLISH
Negative Peace (In languages)
• An example of negative peace in language is the
use of non-sexist terms and politically correct
vocabulary.
• Changing the terms alone will not solve the
problem if the social structures that perpetuate
such inequality are not rebuilt.
6. PEACE AND LANGUAGE/ENGLISH
Positive Peace (In languages)
• If strong and just social structures were in place,
restoring peace would not be an issue.
• Therefore, there is a strong connection between
the pursuit of more equality and the
establishment of fair social structures in the areas
of human rights, ecological well-being and
awareness through education.
7. PEACE AND LANGUAGE/ENGLISH
Human Rights
Linguistic Rights: 1996 Declaration of Linguistic
Human Rights (UNESCO)
Accepting and respecting linguistic varieties
promotes linguistic human rights.
8. PEACE AND LANGUAGE/ENGLISH
Economic hegemony and economic well-being
• The spread of English as a new form of imperialism.
• Linguistic Imperialism: The dominance asserted and
mantained by the establishment and continuous
reconstitution of structural and cultural inequalities
between English and other languages.
• Linguistic Imperialism stands on the way of linguistic
peace.
9. PEACE AND LANGUAGE/ENGLISH
Can imperialism be considered from a
linguistic point of view or, instead,
imperialism is a political, military and
economic mechanism of dominance which
employs language simply as a tool?
10. PEACE AND LANGUAGE/ENGLISH
Ecological Well-Being and Education
“The goal is to preserve not only birds in general, but
endangered species in particular. Therefore, linguistically,
ecological concerns should lead us also to work towards an
ecology of Englishes, Spanishes and other languages”
Achieving this balance depends on efforts. One of the
most important is education.
The school curriculum for children can reflect a
concern for language if topics such as language
change, diversity and endangerment are addressed.
11. OFFSETTING VIOLENCE
Structural peace: abolishment of unjust and violent
structures.
Cultural violence (Galtung, 1990): using aspects of
culture (language, religion, ideology, arts, science)
to legitimize direct or structural violence.
Linguistic violence: Acts against survival, well being,
identity and freedom motivated by linguistic
factors.
12. OFFSETTING VIOLENCE
Individuals or groups are often judged and
discriminated because of their accent, dialect,
proficiency or even the inability of speaking a
certain language.
In most cases the variety or dialect is associated
with lack of intelligence, limited education,
laziness, inferior social status or poor economic
conditions.
13. OFFSETTING VIOLENCE
“Every day, around the world, individuals are
told to change, ignore or suppress their
linguistic expression because of
preconceptions or stereotypes.”
(P. Friedrich)
Education is fundamental to extend linguistic justice.
14. OFFSETTING VIOLENCE
African American Vernacular (AAV) also known
as Ebonics
The Southern variations of English in the USA
Hispanic accent of Latin American immigrants in
the USA
French X English (Quebec, Canada)
15. HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT
OF PEACE STUDIES
Language is an important element in peace
process.
Search for a language that promotes peace or
which unifies humanity (Tower of Babel
analogy).
Creation of artificial languages to serve as an
“neutral” international lingua franca (Esperanto
and Volapük).
16. HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT
OF PEACE STUDIES
For long the idea of achieving understanding
through language has appealed to philosophers,
linguists, writers and teachers.
View that sharing language leads to more peace and
tolerance.
“Men did not only understand each other, but they
had an identical understanding of the world around
them” (Henry Prais referring to the mythical preBabel wolrd)
17. HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT
OF PEACE STUDIES
English is considered the current lingua franca.
For many the spread of English is associated with
political and cultural domination.
Peace linguistics: relationships between language,
communication, education and peace.
Researches helped to understand conflict
resolution, education is the essential vehicle to
disseminate such knowledge.
18. HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT
OF PEACE STUDIES
Conflicts of the twentieth century boosted the
study of peace within the social sciences.
World War I, World War II, Vietnam War, neoimperialism, Cold War and globalization.
Peace education emerged to respond to
“wholesale carnage during the twentieth century
with nuclear bombs, genocide, holocausts and
environmental damage” (Harris, 2004).
19. HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT
OF PEACE STUDIES
Need for studies that establish culture values,
beliefs and attitudes towards peace.
Different cultures = different meanings of peace
Translation or even the sharing of languages cannot
guarantee unity of thought.
The widespread use of international languages such
as English brings the need to find models and
practices that allow for coexistence of languages.
20. HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT
OF PEACE STUDIES
International initiatives to promote linguistic peace:
MOST (Management of Social Tranformation) from
UNESCO
Linguapax
TESOL (Teachers of English to Speakers of Other
Languages)
Terralingua
21. PEACE LINGUISTICS AND PEACE
SOCIOLINGUSTICS
Friedrich talks about distinctions between ways of
looking at peace, referring to Gomes de Matos’
work “Learning to Communicate Peacefully”.
She also states another different way of looking at
peace, which she relates to the peace that is
negotiated trough the interaction among
languages, language varieties and users of
different languages and varieties.
22. PEACE LINGUISTICS AND PEACE
SOCIOLINGUSTICS
- ‘communicating about peace’ –
central concern in peace education.
- ‘communicating peacefully’ –
important focus for peace linguistics.
- ‘peace that is negotiated trough the
interaction among languages,
language varieties and users of
different languages and varieties’ –
chief importance to peace
sociolinguistics.
Are connected
and together can
help create a
relationship that
is probably as old
as the language
itself
23. ENGLISH AND PEACE:
THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS
Relationship between language and
society
sociolinguistics = sociology + linguistics
24. ENGLISH AND PEACE:
THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS
World Englishes:
To understand English and its peace promoting possibilities
we should take into account the uses and the users of the
language.
The study of English has been empowering people whose
lives are affected by English from documenting varieties
and arguing for the legitimacy of diverse linguistic
expressions.
Peace trough language needs to be accepted as a viable
alternative to the suspicion that global languages promote
inequality and unfairness.
25. ENGLISH AND PEACE:
THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS
Critical sociolinguistics:
•
•
•
The denounce of English evils and its discouragement
instead of using some of this energy to, otherwise, design a
structure that would:
Accept that the lingua franca roll is inevitable in this world
scenario.
Investigate the weight of English in peace (negative and
positive potential).
Propose both linguistic education and linguistic activism
as ways to linguistic diversity and linguistic peace, in a
world that needs a common language for practical
purposes.
26. ENGLISH AND PEACE:
THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS
There’s proof that individuals have the power to
offset the potential dangers of hegemonic
languages.
There hasn’t been a movement that, instead of
attacking English, establishes its real potential for
peace.
Once one becomes aware of his role in promoting
rights and education trough language, he becomes a
potential agent of linguistic peace.
27. ENGLISH AND PEACE:
THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS
“Language is a city to the building of which
every human being brought a stone”
(R. Waldo)
We can conclude by this analogy that language is the
result of a collective process of construction.
Globalization, the employment of lingua franca and
the death of several languages are also collective
processes.
28. IMPLICATIONS
To live in a world of respect for linguistic
diversity, we need to change not only our
vocabulary, but also the way we look at those
around us.
The way to achieve the fairer social order we all
need is trough peace-oriented linguistic
education and other forms of peace education
that work together.
29. IMPLICATIONS
“We need to make peace with
languages before attempting to
make peace through them.”
(P. Friedrich)
30. WORLD ENGLISHES
By the end of WWII English was elevated to an even higher
status.
Latin American schools started adopting English to the foreign
language curriculum. Overtime, linguistic borrowings became
anglicized, indicating language contact and power.
The Concentric Circles model presents three main contexts of
English use, organized according to the historical spread of the
language.
The movement that has given English status is not complete.
31. WORLD ENGLISHES
American
and
h
es
eri
a
la
nd
Ze
a
Ne
w
400 million Sin
Nig
Au
str
ali
a
r
India For
me
Malaysia
pin
So
u
(ar th A
gu fric
ab a
ly )
A
US
400 million
s
ie
British
Isles
n
lo
s
riti
B
ilip
Ph
The movement that
has given English
status is not complete
n
illio
m
co
Countries in which
English is the
official or default
official language
759
Expanding circle result of the spread
of English as a
language of
international
communication
e
or
p
ga
Countries where
English is official but
there are other official
and/or present
languages and where
English fulfils
intranational purposes
beside international
ones
32. WORLD ENGLISHES
English suffers an inevitable change.
The use of the term “variety” as a political
statement.
“Dialects” or “varieties” seen as inferior and substandard.
Author defends legitimization of multiple varieties
of English.
33. WORLD ENGLISHES
Language purists:
Standard English superiority due to educational
background and properties of the language.
Language variations are not accepted as a
legitimate use.
Prescriptivism; preservation and restriction.
34. WORLD ENGLISHES
Defense of English variations:
The use of varieties to serve as a functional tool.
Language changes based on affective needs and concerns
should be consider legitimate.
Social phenomena and socially agreed practices shape
language’s variations.
Institutionalized varieties.
Understanding and knowing different varieties and
cultural meanings within them: important to establish
linguistic peace.
35. WORLD ENGLISHES
Globalization and varieties:
English is not used for the same purposes.
Centripetal force: brings users to a homogenized use of
English.
Centrifugal force: originates innovation and language
change.
Clash between the two forces causes diversity, changes
and wider communication.
36. WORLD ENGLISHES
The users and uses of English around the world:
English is employed by many for specific functions
and purposes.
Not all users, to fulfill their needs, will have native
or native-like skills.
Therefore, different levels of engagement with the
language on different realms is a reality.
37. WORLD ENGLISHES
English in education:
60% of all school students in Europe study English.
Tendency to teach certain courses in English in university.
Education through English permits a “membership” in a worldwide
community.
Recommended to use English critically.
Educator’s awareness of the power of English.
Knowledge of English improves access to information.
38. WORLD ENGLISHES
English and the law:
Presence of English in legal systems of certain
countries.
English predominance in international law.
39. WORLD ENGLISHES
English in the media:
Globalization allowed greater access to English
Open TV x Cable TV = class division.
CNN in Atlanta has versions in Spanish, German,
Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, etc.
Counteraction: the spread of English always means
displacement and replacement of other languages.
40. WORLD ENGLISHES
English on the Internet
New linguistic rules.
Local languages will be affected by Internet.
Will English maintain its current status?
The speed of growth.
41. WORLD ENGLISHES
Literature in English:
28% of the books in the world are published in
English.
A strong tradition of postcolonial literature has
emerged.
English has become a significant presence.
Wide availability of English texts.
42. WORLD ENGLISHES
English in the workplace:
The teaching of business English.
Unspoken subtleties + cultural differences =
clashes.
To promote peace: the understanding of cultural
background of the parties involved.
Miscommunication.
43. WORLD ENGLISHES
English in Advertising:
Advertising has a close connection with English
language.
There are four reasons accelerating the process of
linguistic borrowing from English.
Advertisers have to weigh the risks and the
potential gains of using the language.
44. WORLD ENGLISHES
Advertising Peace: English as the language of humanitarian
campaigns.
Diplomacy:
Diplomatic negotiations can go to a different direction of
what they intended due to divergent cultural values that
are not shared even though they speak the same
language.
The important role of translation.
Communicate national values in a constructive way is
appropriate.
45. WORLD ENGLISHES
World Englishes and peace:
When dealing with two individuals from two
different cultures there is always a kind of
preferable English to use.
Relativizing the status of varieties according to
its use.
46. WORLD ENGLISHES AND PEACE
Peace within the circles:
• inner circle (native speakers) do
not want to lose control over their
"own" language
• outer circle has ambivalent
feelings towards English because
there is a sense of domination and
Globalization implied
- Ownership
- Status
- Language change
-Identity crisis
- Tension
- Harmonization
47. WORLD ENGLISHES AND PEACE
m
759
American
and
h
Other problems
concerning foreign
speakers is how they
often think they are
inferior to native
speakers.
eri
a
an
d
Ze
al
Ne
w
Nig
India For
me
r
Au
str
ali
a
Malaysia
es
s
A
US
pin
So
u
(ar th A
gu fric
ab a
ly )
ie
on
British
Isles
400 million
ilip
Ph
Expanding circle
issues come from the
fact that the language
is totally new to them
and the fact that they
can apply their own
twist into it.
l
co
s
riti
B
n
illio
r
po
a
ng
400 million Si
e
48. WORLD ENGLISHES AND PEACE
Overall, native speakers need to accept that English is no
longer in their possession.
Second language users need to overcome the colonialism
and violence aspect from the past of the language.
Foreign speakers must lose their insecurity to use
English as a tool they have acquired and not feel
ashamed about it.
Peace, from the linguistic point of view, is intimately
attached to association of cultures with languages and
making them a weapon of communication and mutual
understanding.
49. REFERENCES
FRIEDRICH, P. “Theories of peace and their
relationship to language”. In: ______ Language,
Negotiation and Peace: The Use of English in
Conflict. London: Continuum, 2007.
______. “English around the world: varieties, users
and uses”. In: ______ Language, Negotiation
and Peace: The Use of English in Conflict.
London: Continuum, 2007.