BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//EuroSEAS 2024//EN X-WR-CALNAME:EuroSEAS 2024 BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:Europe/Amsterdam X-LIC-LOCATION:Europe/Amsterdam BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZOFFSETFROM:+0100 TZOFFSETTO:+0200 DTSTART:19700329T020000 RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=3;BYDAY=-1SU END:DAYLIGHT BEGIN:STANDARD TZOFFSETFROM:+0200 TZOFFSETTO:+0100 DTSTART:19701025T030000 RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=10;BYDAY=-1SU END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20241123T221000 UID:euroseas-2024-sea-languages-as-diaspora-languages-in-europe-1 SUMMARY:SEA languages as diaspora languages in Europe (1) LOCATION:REC A2.07 DESCRIPTION:The study of the languages of the South-East Asian diaspora has developed in the last 20 years involving communities in Australia, (McLeod , Verdon & Wang 2021, Lising 2022, Utomo 2015), in the United States (Y oung & Myluong, 1999 and Teachout, 2005) and Canada (Umbal & Nagy 2 021, Nagy 2021, Le & Trofimovich, 2023), but has been almost ignored in European countries with big diaspora communities such as France and Italy. Actually, according to a recent study on heritage speakers in Italy (Biazz i 2018), migrants from SEA are the most multilingual of all. However, this multilingualism is maintained only by first generation speakers, and not al l languages in their rich repertoires are transmitted to the children. A si milar finding has been observed in the Netherlands, where research by Flore y and van Engelenhoven (2001) among migrants form the Moluccas (Indonesia) has uncovered remaining speakers of approximately twenty-five languages ind igenous to the Moluccas, some of which are highly endangered. This panel ex amines heritage language maintenance practices, multilingual choices, and f amily language policy among SEA diaspora communities in Europe, a topic spo radically explored so far, except for few studies on the East Timorese in P ortugal (Goglia & Alfonso 2012), or the Thai in the German periphery (S erwe 2015), the Moluccans in the Netherlands (Moro 2016), and the Vietnames e in Manchester (Anh 2022). The aim is to understand the linguistic behavio ur and the linguistic choices that first and second-generation speakers of SEA languages such as the Filipino in Italy or the Vietnamese in France mak e in their new home in the diaspora. We welcome papers that deal with any s ubfield of linguistics and different approaches or frameworks on SEA langua ges as heritage languages in Europe, such as language use, language contact , translanguaging or code-switching, family language policy, language maint enance or loss, language planning, and linguistic identity. URL:https://euroseas2024.org/panels/sea-languages-as-diaspora-languages-in-europe DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20240723T143000 DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20240723T160000 END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20241123T221000 UID:euroseas-2024-sea-languages-as-diaspora-languages-in-europe-2 SUMMARY:SEA languages as diaspora languages in Europe (2) LOCATION:REC A2.07 DESCRIPTION:The study of the languages of the South-East Asian diaspora has developed in the last 20 years involving communities in Australia, (McLeod , Verdon & Wang 2021, Lising 2022, Utomo 2015), in the United States (Y oung & Myluong, 1999 and Teachout, 2005) and Canada (Umbal & Nagy 2 021, Nagy 2021, Le & Trofimovich, 2023), but has been almost ignored in European countries with big diaspora communities such as France and Italy. Actually, according to a recent study on heritage speakers in Italy (Biazz i 2018), migrants from SEA are the most multilingual of all. However, this multilingualism is maintained only by first generation speakers, and not al l languages in their rich repertoires are transmitted to the children. A si milar finding has been observed in the Netherlands, where research by Flore y and van Engelenhoven (2001) among migrants form the Moluccas (Indonesia) has uncovered remaining speakers of approximately twenty-five languages ind igenous to the Moluccas, some of which are highly endangered. This panel ex amines heritage language maintenance practices, multilingual choices, and f amily language policy among SEA diaspora communities in Europe, a topic spo radically explored so far, except for few studies on the East Timorese in P ortugal (Goglia & Alfonso 2012), or the Thai in the German periphery (S erwe 2015), the Moluccans in the Netherlands (Moro 2016), and the Vietnames e in Manchester (Anh 2022). The aim is to understand the linguistic behavio ur and the linguistic choices that first and second-generation speakers of SEA languages such as the Filipino in Italy or the Vietnamese in France mak e in their new home in the diaspora. We welcome papers that deal with any s ubfield of linguistics and different approaches or frameworks on SEA langua ges as heritage languages in Europe, such as language use, language contact , translanguaging or code-switching, family language policy, language maint enance or loss, language planning, and linguistic identity. URL:https://euroseas2024.org/panels/sea-languages-as-diaspora-languages-in-europe DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20240723T163000 DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20240723T180000 END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR