This book employs the realm of English Language Teaching (ELT) as a
discursive point of departure to explore how individuals, groups,
entities and institutions apprehend, embrace, deal with, manipulate,
problematize and resist glocal flows of people, ideas, information,
goods, and technology. It apprehends and attends to tensions arising
from the fluidly local-global construction and negotiation of borders of
identity and interaction within a diverse array of contexts and English
education therein. These tensions, whether conceptual or pedagogical,
may arise in and through governmental and institutional policymaking,
teacher training, or curriculum and materials development, and in the
learning experience both within and beyond the classroom, as teachers
and students engage with course content and each other.