This edited book examines English-Medium Instruction (EMI) language
policy and practice in higher education around the world, highlighting
how English language usage affects the internationalization of
universities, the way that disciplines are taught and learned, and
questioning whether internationalization through EMI achieves the values
of global citizenship and inclusivity/diversity to which it aspires.
Written by experts in the field, the book includes data-based research
from universities around the globe, with three chapters on Asia and the
Far East (Malaysia, Japan and China), four on Europe (Denmark, the
Netherlands and Italy) and one each on Africa (Ethiopia) and Central
America (Mexico). Sources include policy documents, questionnaire
surveys, focus groups and semi-structured interviews involving
university policymakers, lecturers, students, and administrative staff.
This book will be of interest to students and scholars of language and
education policy, internationalization and applied linguistics,
particularly English-Medium Instruction (EMI), academic English and
English as a Lingua Franca (ELF).