Language Policy in business and industry: between local and global developments
Un(intended) Language Planning in a Globalising World: Multiple Levels of Players at Work : 145-162 (2018)
Abstract
[EN] Globalisation reaches to all corners of the world, although not to the same degree
everywhere. The daily lives of people get affected in the products they can buy
(consumer goods from abroad), the way they dress (clothes produced far away), the food
they eat (exotic food from other countries), the culture they consume (eg. Hollywood
movies), the news they watch and even the way they speak. One of the consequences
of globalisation is that many people are found to adopt more urban lifestyles including
those living in rural areas. As Castells (1996) pointed out, in our “networked world” we
experience interconnectedness with people from around the globe.
In the Basque Country in Spain, over the past 40 years a strong policy has been
developed to support and strengthen the use of the minority language, Basque, in all
domains of society, including private business and industry. The policy to promote
the minority language has led to several initiatives to encourage the use of the
minority language in companies. During about the same period of time, the global
language English has gradually obtained a more prominent position in society.
In a region like the Basque Country in Spain, globalisation is clearly noticeable.
A large variety of international products are available to consumers, because the
region is well-connected by road, by rail and by sea to Europe and other countries
around the globe. Furthermore, the improvement in technology has an important
influence on the daily lives of people, such as their language habits, which is of
special relevance in an area where a local language has been spoken since “time
immemorial”. Over the centuries, through foreign contacts the Basque language has
been influenced by several languages, such as French, Latin and Spanish. During
the 19th and 20th centuries, an important shift took place. Many indigenous Basque
people switched from speaking Basque to Spanish, and fewer people transmitted the
language to the next generation. During the period of the Franco dictatorship (1939-
1975), the Basque language was suppressed and this further accelerated language
shift toward Spanish. Only in the last quarter of the 20th century a relatively strong
language policy was implemented to revitalise Basque; the main aim is to extend the
use of Basque to all domains of society. Notwithstanding these revitalisation efforts,
Spanish has remained the dominant language in the Basque society, and due to global
developments English has gradually obtained a larger presence, although compared
to some Northern European countries its presence is still modest.
This chapter looks at the efforts of Basque language planning and policy, in
particular in the private sector, against the background of globalisation. On the one
hand, the Basque regional government has developed an important programme
of measures to revitalise the use of the Basque language, not only in the fields of
education, culture and media (Gorter, Zenotz, Etxague & Cenoz, 2014), but also for
private companies. On the other hand, the same government has also developed plans
for internationalisation of companies; efforts which recently were intensified after the
beginning of the economic crisis. The governmental policy and planning to promote
the local language Basque go in parallel with campaigns to make Basque companies
operate on a global market, where the use of English is often seen as obligatory. The
chapter discusses how the local companies mediate between the local and global
demands, and how this has affected the region.