Newsletters
News
30th January 2024 - ATLAS Think Language First Manifesto Unveiled at the House of Lords
Sponsored by Lord Boateng, Chancellor of the Çï¿ûÊÓƵ, and led by Prof Maria Arche and Dr Alexandra Perovic, the ATLAS-Leiden Manifesto was launched at the House of Lords, in partnership with the RCSLT.
Pictured L-R: Dr Alexandra Perovic (UCL), Prof Tracey Reynolds (Çï¿ûÊÓƵ), Prof Maria Arche (Çï¿ûÊÓƵ), Lord Boateng, Professor Jane Harrington (Çï¿ûÊÓƵ)
Written with input from 60+ multidisciplinary scholars and stakeholders at a scientific meeting in Leiden, the #ThinkLanguageFirst Manifesto has been endorsed by over 55 organizations, including the British linguistics associations LAGB, BAAL and BACL, Speech and Language UK, Autistica, the Down Syndrome Association, and the Association of Youth Offending Team Managers.
The manifesto highlights that over 10% of the world population face different language challenges and calls for timely assessments, broad recognition of the significant impact of unmet language needs on behavioural issues, educational exclusion, and a higher likelihood of unemployment and criminal activities. The panel speakers addressed the crucial topic of language skills as the gateway to lifelong wellbeing and educational attainment.
The full programme is available
Professor Maria Arche said:
“I am very happy to see that the ATLAS-Leiden Manifesto has brought together such a strong and diverse array of experts and organizations, all in agreement that language development must be put at the forefront to help children and young people reach their potential.”
Speakers at the launch included Lord Boateng, Professor Karen Bryan, Mr Steve Jamieson, Professor MarÃa J Arche and a panel consisting of:
- Dr Alexandra Perovic (UCL), chair
- Professor Joao Costa, Linguist and Minister of Education from Portugal
- Mr Diz Minnitt, SEND and Speech and Language Lead for Association of YOT Managers (AYM), Head of Youth Justice and Support Service, Milton Keynes
- Ms Carol-Ann Murray, Associate Director - Learning Disability and Autism at NHS South East London
- Ms Sara Pennington, HM Inspectorate of Prisons
- Ms Louisa Reeves, Speech and Language UK
- Ms Sharon Gray, Youth Justice Board
- Justice Renate Winter, President of UN Committee of the Rights of the Child
- Dr Lana Peto, President of council for juveniles on High Criminal Court of Republic Croatia
- Professor George Tsoulas, President of the Linguistics Association of Great Britain
Find out more about the ATLAS team and endorsing the manifesto by visiting the website.
November 2021 - Risk and Health Communication during Covid-19: A Linguistic Landscape Analysis
Dr Erika Kalocsányiová and colleagues from the Institute for Lifecourse Development have recently published a paper examining the amount, content, and prominence of Covid-19 signage in Hackney, a London borough severely hit by the first wave of the pandemic.
Having analyzed 1288 signs collected between May and July 2020, results showed significant differences in Covid-19 signage between deprived and less deprived areas. These differences (e.g., in messaging about staying at home) have created inequalities in access to Covid-19 related health information and guidance. The paper also explores the changes in Covid-19 signage over time and the tailoring of risk and health messages to minority communities.
Read the full paper here:
March 2021 - Extract of Ade Solanke’s play Phillis in London filmed in the Painted Hall
An extract of Phillis in London written and directed by award-winning playwright and screenwriter Ade Solanke, was filmed in the Painted Hall. This piece is based on a visit made by the young poet Phillis Wheatley to the Painted Hall in 1773. A teenage prodigy, Wheatley came to London to publish her first collection of poems, although still enslaved. She was the first African American poet – and second American female poet – to have her work published in English.
As the originally planned live performance at the Old Royal Naval College hasn’t been possible, a short film has been created to give a taster of the play. This film was recorded in the atmospheric Painted Hall, in the exact place Phillis herself visited over 200 years ago.
December 2020 - Professor Michael Putnam from the Centre of Language Science, Pennsylvania State University, appointed CREL Visiting Professor 2020-2023
. His research interests include studying how the general architecture of cognition intersects with grammatical knowledge and performance biases. Michael researches the structure (syntax & morphology) and meaning (semantics & pragmatics) of language and the intersection of these two units, with an empirical focus on Germanic languages past and present. He has a particular interest in bilingual and multilingual grammars, especially varieties of German throughout the world in contact situations with other languages.
Issue 4 of Professor Andrew King's VPFJ is out 26 October 2020
The “Welcome” by King shows its rapid success at garnering an excellent reputation for high-quality work and rigorous editing: the journal invited proposals for special autumn issues up to 2023 and received 12 excellent applications. After consideration and negotiation with guest editors it has special issues already agreed up to and including Autumn 2026. With the current 4th issue, it inaugurated a series that, to our knowledge, no other journal in the field runs: annotated critical editions of inaccessible texts that are otherwise useful to our field.
November 2020 - Dr Justine Baillie has edited, and contributed an essay to, Global Morrison, a special issue of Oxford University Press’s journal Contemporary Women’s Writing.
The issue is dedicated to the global significance of the Nobel prize-winning African-American novelist, Toni Morrison. Having been commissioned by the general editors of Contemporary Women’s Writing to lead the Global Morrison research group, Justine organised a very successful two-day international conference at the Çï¿ûÊÓƵ in June 2017 and has now edited the proceedings for the OUP publication. Contributors examine Morrison’s literary articulations with the works of writers such as Italian novelist Umberto Eco, British novelist Zadie Smith, French writer Gisèle Pineau, Afro-Brazilian author Conceição Evaristo, and American poet Robin Coste Lewis. Read the full feature in the blog.
July 2020 - Professor Maria Arche awarded the NIAS-Lorentz Thematic Group recognition as Principal Investigator
is one of the institutes of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) – its mission is to provide a physical and intellectual space for advanced research in the humanities and social sciences that is driven by curiosity and cross-discipline collaboration. NIAS is committed to supporting independent research and knowledge exchange in a setting that is both collaborative and multi-disciplinary – breaking down cross-discipline barriers and facilitating innovative advances in the process.