非洲法语国家的英语化?职场语言使用洞察

Steven J. Sacco, Christiane OHIN-TRAORÉ
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在这篇文章中,作者描述了一项研究的结果,该研究测量了一组在非洲法语区从事物流和全球供应链管理职位的女性经理和员工对英语和法语使用情况的看法,即“非洲女性物流”。目标是确定“强制英语作为通用公司语言”,有时被称为英语化(Neeley, 2012),是否已经在非洲法语国家的公司中获得了重要的存在。来自非洲法语区94家公司的124名受试者回答了一项包含14个问题的调查;24名受试者参加了随访访谈。结果表明,英语在绝大多数受访者中受到高度重视,并且主要用于讲法语的员工与讲英语的老板、客户和供应商之间的交流。然而,法语仍然是工作场所使用的主要语言,因为124名讲法语的专业人士几乎完全用法语与同事、讲法语的客户和供应商交流。因此,英语并不总是像Neeley(2012, 2017)和其他商务英语作为通用语(BELF)研究人员所声称的那样是商业通用语(参见例如,Kankaanranta等人,2015,2018)。相反,当前研究的发现为多语言工作环境提供了越来越多的证据,即使在以英语为官方语言的跨国公司中也是如此(Ehrenreich, 2009;Janssens & Steyaert, 2014;萨科,2017,2019a)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Englishnization in Francophone Africa? Insights into Workplace Language Use
In this essay, the authors describe the results of a study that measured the use of English and French as perceived by one group of female managers and employees working in logistics and global supply chain management positions in Francophone Africa, Women in Logistics-Africa. The goal was to determine if “mandating English as the common corporate language,” sometimes called Englishnization (Neeley, 2012), has attained a significant presence within corporations operating in Francophone Africa. The 124 subjects from 94 companies in Francophone Africa, responded to a 14-question survey; 24 subjects participated in follow-up interviews. The results indicate that English is highly valued among the vast majority of respondents and is mostly used in exchanges between the French-speaking employees and their English-speaking bosses, clients, and suppliers. French, however, remains the dominant workplace language used overall as the 124 French-speaking professionals communicate almost exclusively in French with co-workers and French-speaking clients and suppliers. Consequently, English is not always the business lingua franca as claimed by Neeley (2012, 2017), and other Business English as a Lingua Franca (BELF) researchers (see e.g., Kankaanranta et al., 2015, 2018). Instead, the findings in the current study add to an increasing pool of evidence of multilingual workplace settings, even among multinational corporations where English is the official language (Ehrenreich, 2009; Janssens & Steyaert, 2014; Sacco, 2017, 2019a).
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