The Ethiopian Language Policy: A Historical and Typological Overview

Authors

  • Zelealem Leyew Assocaite Professor, Department of Linguistics, Addis Ababa University

Keywords:

Language policy, Language planning, Language diversity, Linguistic human rights, Lingua-franca

Abstract

This paper describes the Ethiopian language policy from the historical and
typological perspectives. In the historical overview, the different covert and overt language
policies so far encountered are examined. A comparison is made among the language
ideologies of the Imperial (1930-1974), the Derg(1974-1991) and the EPRDF (1991 – )
governments. In the typological overview, the language policies implemented by different
governments are classified by type based on the existing literature on language policy.
Issues surrounding language diversity, status and corpus planning and policy formulations
are addressed. An attempt is made to assess and compare the Ethiopian experience with
experiences of other multilingual countries. Ethiopia is not only a multilingual but also a
biscriptual country in which the Ethiopic and Latin scripts are competing. Due to its
historical trajectory, Ethiopia is neither Anglo-Phone nor Franco-phone in the strict sense of
the terms. It promotes an endoglossic language policy with English playing an important
role, but without connection to the colonial legacy. These and other complex sociolinguistic
profiles make the prevalence of an optimal language policy in Ethiopia somewhat complex
as compared to other Sub-Saharan African countries that promote exoglossic or mixed
language policies.

Published

2021-06-12