Negotiating Linguistic Disruptions and Connections in Migratory Contexts: Language Practices among Child Migrants in an Urban Market in Ghana
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Journal of Linguistic Anthropology
Abstract
This article employs ethnographic methods to investigate communicative practices that shape
the linguistic repertoires of child migrants in Agbogbloshie, an urban market in Ghana.
Similar studies discuss the relationship between language and migration by focusing on
language shift and loss among migrants; this article argues that migrants in complex
linguistically diverse spaces—motivated by both social and economic dynamics of their space
—make linguistic choices while negotiating their daily lives that lead to the development of
complex, heterogeneous linguistic repertoires and practices. Data were gathered from
interactions at childcare centers, where child migrants spend the day with peers and
caregivers, and migrant homes, where child migrants spend the evenings and weekends with
their families. The data reveals that while migrant parents negotiate their own multilingual
practices with their migrant children, child migrants expand their linguistic repertoires
through relationships and interactions with caregivers and peers in childcare centers and
neighborhoods, leading to the development of heterogeneous language practices that neither
their parents or caregivers necessarily possess. The article concludes that migration may lead
to complex linguistic diversity. The study contributes to Indigenous perspectives on linguistic
diversity and our understanding of the structure and nature of superdiversification . [migration, child migrants, multilingualism, Agbogbloshie Kayayei,
language contact]
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Research Article