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A British Council
seminar on multilingualism brought together policymakers, practitioners, academics and business managers from across Europe, to formulate a "clear and convincing case for multilingualism".
Language has proven to be both a barrier and an opportunity by EU citizens when it comes to mobility, and the British Council invited delegates to discover what Europe thinks, through panel presentations and wider forum discussions, which took place at the Committee of the Regions in Brussels.
The seminar, on 20-22 March 2007, examined the case
for multilingualism both in material terms such as career benefits and in terms of cultural awareness and development, for example in the promotion lifelong learning, adaptability and tolerance among EU citizens.
It concluded
with a debate on the theory and practice of multilingualism, and the unveiling of language project proposals set to be implemented with the input of leading researchers, policymakers, practitioners and business representatives from Benelux, the Czech Republic, the UK, France, Italy, Poland, Scotland and Spain.
Commission President José Manuel Barroso told a Berlin conference in November 2006: "Together, let us defend multilingualism, one of the inviolable principles of European integration, and a better understanding between language communities. Let us encourage language learning and the translation of works of European literature, which would enrich us all."
Renowned writer, broadcaster and linguistics expert David Crystal says: "As we look around the world, we see that multilingualism is the default human condition, a principle that has been obscured in parts of Europe as a consequence of colonial history. We urgently need to reassert it, and to implement it in practical ways, for, in the modern world, monolingualism is not a strength but a handicap."
Dr Alison Phipps, from the UK's University of Glasgow, said that she was "concerned to address the question of how it is that people of different languages and cultures encounter each other and how the contexts of their everyday encounters shape these encounters".