Abstract
This article examines the construction of epistemic injustice in creating and implementing an EMI policy. Drawing on “epistemic injustice” (Fricker, Miranda. 2007. Epistemic injustice: Power and the ethics of knowing. Oxford: Oxford University Press) and “misframing” (Fraser, Nancy. 2009. Scales of justice: Reimagining political space in a globalizing world. New York: Columbia University Press), we discuss how the EMI policy in Nepal’s school education has reinforced the epistemic nature of social injustice. Taking an ethnographic approach, we have analyzed how EMI policies are created, interpreted, and implemented in two public schools located in historically marginalized ethnic minority/Indigenous communities. Our analyses show that the schools misframe and misrecognize Indigenous/ethnic minority parents’ and children’s linguistic knowledge and awareness of language education policy. While reproducing neoliberal values, EMI policies construct a deficit identity of Indigenous/ethnic minority communities by erasing and stigmatizing their knowledge of mother tongues in school. Such policies not only promote an English-only monolingual ideology but also pose multiple challenges for epistemic access of Indigenous/minority students and affect parents’ “party of participation” (Fraser, Nancy. 2009. Scales of justice: Reimagining political space in a globalizing world. New York: Columbia University Press) in policymaking process.
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Special Issue: Power, Linguistic Discrimination and Inequality in English Language Teaching and Learning (ELTL): Reflection and Reform for Applied Linguistics from the Global South; Guest Editors: Fan Gabriel Fang and Sender Dovchin
- Editorial
- Reflection and reform of applied linguistics from the Global South: power and inequality in English users from the Global South
- Research Articles
- Translingual English discrimination: loss of academic sense of belonging, the hiring order of things, and students from the Global South
- Applied linguistics from the Global South: way forward to linguistic equality and social justice
- English high-stakes testing and constructing the ‘international’ in Kazakhstan and Mongolia
- The mundanity of translanguaging and Aboriginal identity in Australia
- Multimodal or multilingual? Native English teachers’ engagement with translanguaging in Hong Kong TESOL classrooms
- Epistemic injustice and neoliberal imaginations in English as a medium of instruction (EMI) policy
- Commentary
- Transidiomatic favela: language resources and embodied resistance in Brazilian and South African peripheries
- Special Issue: Translanguaging Outside the Centre: Perspectives from Chinese Language Teaching; Guest Editor: Danping Wang
- Editorial
- Translanguaging outside the centre: perspectives from Chinese language teaching
- Research Articles
- Translanguaging as a decolonising approach: students’ perspectives towards integrating Indigenous epistemology in language teaching
- Translanguaging as sociolinguistic infrastructuring to foster epistemic justice in international Chinese-medium-instruction degree programs in China
- Translanguaging as a pedagogy: exploring the use of teachers’ and students’ bilingual repertoires in Chinese language education
- A think-aloud method of investigating translanguaging strategies in learning Chinese characters
- Translanguaging pedagogies in developing morphological awareness: the case of Japanese students learning Chinese in China
- Facilitating learners’ participation through classroom translanguaging: comparing a translanguaging classroom and a monolingual classroom in Chinese language teaching
- A multimodal analysis of the online translanguaging practices of international students studying Chinese in a Chinese university
- Special Issue: Research Synthesis in Language Learning and Teaching; Guest Editors: Sin Wang Chong, Melissa Bond and Hamish Chalmers
- Editorial
- Opening the methodological black box of research synthesis in language education: where are we now and where are we heading?
- Research Article
- A typology of secondary research in Applied Linguistics
- Review Articles
- A scientometric analysis of applied linguistics research (1970–2022): methodology and future directions
- A systematic review of meta-analyses in second language research: current practices, issues, and recommendations
- Research Article
- Topics, publication patterns, and reporting quality in systematic reviews in language education. Lessons from the international database of education systematic reviews (IDESR)
- Review Article
- Bilingual education in China: a qualitative synthesis of research on models and perceptions
- Regular Issue Articles
- An interactional approach to speech acts for applied linguistics
- “Church is like a mini Korea”: the potential of migrant religious organisations for promoting heritage language maintenance
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Special Issue: Power, Linguistic Discrimination and Inequality in English Language Teaching and Learning (ELTL): Reflection and Reform for Applied Linguistics from the Global South; Guest Editors: Fan Gabriel Fang and Sender Dovchin
- Editorial
- Reflection and reform of applied linguistics from the Global South: power and inequality in English users from the Global South
- Research Articles
- Translingual English discrimination: loss of academic sense of belonging, the hiring order of things, and students from the Global South
- Applied linguistics from the Global South: way forward to linguistic equality and social justice
- English high-stakes testing and constructing the ‘international’ in Kazakhstan and Mongolia
- The mundanity of translanguaging and Aboriginal identity in Australia
- Multimodal or multilingual? Native English teachers’ engagement with translanguaging in Hong Kong TESOL classrooms
- Epistemic injustice and neoliberal imaginations in English as a medium of instruction (EMI) policy
- Commentary
- Transidiomatic favela: language resources and embodied resistance in Brazilian and South African peripheries
- Special Issue: Translanguaging Outside the Centre: Perspectives from Chinese Language Teaching; Guest Editor: Danping Wang
- Editorial
- Translanguaging outside the centre: perspectives from Chinese language teaching
- Research Articles
- Translanguaging as a decolonising approach: students’ perspectives towards integrating Indigenous epistemology in language teaching
- Translanguaging as sociolinguistic infrastructuring to foster epistemic justice in international Chinese-medium-instruction degree programs in China
- Translanguaging as a pedagogy: exploring the use of teachers’ and students’ bilingual repertoires in Chinese language education
- A think-aloud method of investigating translanguaging strategies in learning Chinese characters
- Translanguaging pedagogies in developing morphological awareness: the case of Japanese students learning Chinese in China
- Facilitating learners’ participation through classroom translanguaging: comparing a translanguaging classroom and a monolingual classroom in Chinese language teaching
- A multimodal analysis of the online translanguaging practices of international students studying Chinese in a Chinese university
- Special Issue: Research Synthesis in Language Learning and Teaching; Guest Editors: Sin Wang Chong, Melissa Bond and Hamish Chalmers
- Editorial
- Opening the methodological black box of research synthesis in language education: where are we now and where are we heading?
- Research Article
- A typology of secondary research in Applied Linguistics
- Review Articles
- A scientometric analysis of applied linguistics research (1970–2022): methodology and future directions
- A systematic review of meta-analyses in second language research: current practices, issues, and recommendations
- Research Article
- Topics, publication patterns, and reporting quality in systematic reviews in language education. Lessons from the international database of education systematic reviews (IDESR)
- Review Article
- Bilingual education in China: a qualitative synthesis of research on models and perceptions
- Regular Issue Articles
- An interactional approach to speech acts for applied linguistics
- “Church is like a mini Korea”: the potential of migrant religious organisations for promoting heritage language maintenance