Promoting multilingualism and plurilingualism is a cornerstone of the European identity and citizenship concept (Council Recommendation of 22 May 2019 on a comprehensive approach to the teaching and learning of languages) and a key action within the European Universities Initiative (EUI) projects. Among the current sixty-five alliances, most incorporate the multilingualism objective into a dedicated work package, adopting various approaches (Gazzola et al. 2024; Castellotti et al. 2024; Conceiçao and Zanola 2024). These include establishing a shared language policy within the alliance, offering a catalogue of language courses available through dedicated portals and organising and recognising both formal and informal language learning activities (Castellotti et al. 2024). However, in the EUI landscape, UNITA-Universitas Montium has managed to build a multi-level educational system for a diverse audience that engages with the various activities of the alliance and that promotes intercomprehension between romance languages for academic purposes (Garbarino and Lesparre 2024; Mantegna 2023; Fiorentino et al. 2024; De Poli et al. forthcoming). The latter approach, which has been the subject of numerous research projects and publications since the early 1990s (Bonvino and Garbarino 2022; Degache 2021), is feasible due to the linguistic homogeneity of the alliance, composed of universities based in Romance-language-speaking countries. This paper focuses on the UNITA approach to linguistic diversity as a strategy for fostering the community of students, teachers and administrative staff within the alliance, as well as enhancing international mobility to meet the ambitious 50% goal set by the EUI call.

Language alliances and language policy. A focus on UNITA-Universitas Montium

Elisa Corino;Marcella Costa;Alice Fiorentino;Sandra Garbarino
2025-01-01

Abstract

Promoting multilingualism and plurilingualism is a cornerstone of the European identity and citizenship concept (Council Recommendation of 22 May 2019 on a comprehensive approach to the teaching and learning of languages) and a key action within the European Universities Initiative (EUI) projects. Among the current sixty-five alliances, most incorporate the multilingualism objective into a dedicated work package, adopting various approaches (Gazzola et al. 2024; Castellotti et al. 2024; Conceiçao and Zanola 2024). These include establishing a shared language policy within the alliance, offering a catalogue of language courses available through dedicated portals and organising and recognising both formal and informal language learning activities (Castellotti et al. 2024). However, in the EUI landscape, UNITA-Universitas Montium has managed to build a multi-level educational system for a diverse audience that engages with the various activities of the alliance and that promotes intercomprehension between romance languages for academic purposes (Garbarino and Lesparre 2024; Mantegna 2023; Fiorentino et al. 2024; De Poli et al. forthcoming). The latter approach, which has been the subject of numerous research projects and publications since the early 1990s (Bonvino and Garbarino 2022; Degache 2021), is feasible due to the linguistic homogeneity of the alliance, composed of universities based in Romance-language-speaking countries. This paper focuses on the UNITA approach to linguistic diversity as a strategy for fostering the community of students, teachers and administrative staff within the alliance, as well as enhancing international mobility to meet the ambitious 50% goal set by the EUI call.
2025
141
158
https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/doi/10.3828/ejlp.2025.8
plurilingualism, intercomprehension, language policy, language education, higher education curricula, European universities
Elisa Corino, Marcella Costa, Alice Fiorentino, Sandra Garbarino
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/2063675
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