[Air-l] AoIR in Latin-America
Nils Zurawski
nils.zurawski at uni-hamburg.de
Mon Mar 20 02:06:42 PST 2006
I go along with your argument - But... but as
long as English is the language to tell the story
- the main narratives - English as the lingua
franca of discourses on and about INternet
research - as long as - English will be
important... and powerful - the language is
defining the if somebody gets heard or not... it
also has to do with power of publication, power
of participation and so forth... English speakers
- a minority or not - hold an important tool in
their hands... that might change - but so far has
not...
this also might be worth considering -
best
nilz
>No worries! People who speak in English are a minority in this world.
>The content in English on the Net is shrinking (relatively speaking)
>and so are the users for whom English is their first language. I guess
>it is time for Internet researchers to wake up to this new reality.
>Please read the basic statistics. We're spinning off those who speak
>English. It's not the other way round... Those who write in English are
>in the minority, big way. Let's not portray it otherwise.
>
>Geert
>
>
--
Dr. Nils Zurawski
Universität Hamburg
Inst. für kriminologische Sozialforschung
Allende-Platz 1
20146 Hamburg
Germany
tel. +49 (0) 40 42838 6185
fax. +49 (0) 40 42838 2328
Projekt zu Videoüberwachung: http://www.surveillance-studies.org
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