NOTE SU PLURILINGUISMO E REPERTORI LINGUISTICI DI IMMIGRATI NELLITALIA DELLINIZIO DEL XXI SECOLO / SOME REMARKS ON IMMIGRANTS LINGUISTIC REPERTOIRES IN.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Jack Jedwab Association for Canadian Studies September 27 th, 2008 Canadian Post Olympic Survey.
Advertisements

1 The new pilot project in Lombardy for adult migrant newcomers: Certify your Italian. A language for knowing and making yourself known Certifica il tuo.
1 The Foreign-Born Population in the United States: 2003.
Anne Gilleran BECTA Research Conference London 13 June 2003 The Digital Generation Student Voices from the eWatch Study BECTA Research Conference 13th.
By David J Smith. If the worlds population was 100 people...
Research in linguistic situation, Estonia Keit Kiissel Tallinn University of Technology Estonia.
Race at the Starting Gate: The Social and Economic Integration of the New Second Generation by Monica Boyd.
Jean-Pierre Corbeil* Statistics Canada October 22, 2009 Passing on Ancestral Languages * On behalf of Martin Turcotte, Statistics Canada, author of the.
1 SEEPALS January FOREIGN LANGUAGES STUDIES IN FACULTY OF FOREIGN LANGUAGES P repared by representatives of the University of Tirana.
Ph. D. Completion and Attrition: Baseline Program Data
1 The Labour Market Integration of Immigrants in Germany Key results of the OECD-Report Thomas Liebig Directorate for Employment, Labour and Social Affairs.
THE 2004 LIVING CONDITIONS MONITORING SURVEY : ZAMBIA EXTENT TO WHICH GENDER WAS INCORPORATED presented at the Global Forum on Gender Statistics, Accra.
Legal and constitutional status of Amazigh language in Morocco & North Africa HASSAN ID BALKASSM UNPFII member expert 8 – 10 January 2008, United Nations.
1. 2 Italy: 296 : awarded projects and initiatives in the period 1999 – : average of awarded projects per year in the period 1999 – : National.
REGIONAL EDUCATION INDICATORS PROJECT Progress towards the achievement of the Summit of the Americas Goals November 14, 2007.
TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER 5.0: Workforce Chart 5.1: Total Number of Active Physicians per 1,000 Persons, 1980 – 2008 Chart 5.2: Total Number of Active.
Chapter 5: Workforce. Chartbook 2003 Physician Workforce After dropping slightly in 1999, the number of active physicians per thousand population rose.
AIDS epidemic update Figure AIDS epidemic update Figure 2007 Estimated adult (15–49 years) HIV prevalence rate (%) globally and in Sub-Saharan Africa,
1 The 2007 National Immigrant Survey (Spain) National Statistics Institute (INE) Antonio ARGÜESO director for social and demographic statistics.
Reform of the Italian citizenship law Recognizing citizenship to second generation born and/or grown in Italy. Hearing A more inclusive citizenship open.
Contents Who is behind MIPEX Objectives Production and Producers MIPEX is a tool among others Underpinning framework Relevance Presentation and Users.
1 Learning for employment vocational education and training policy in Europe in Europe.
1Regional policy responses to demographic challenges, Bruxelles, January 2007 EUROSTAT regional population projections Giampaolo LANZIERI Eurostat.
DG Education and Culture New generation of programmes Marco DI MARTINO Information officer Athens, 7 December 2006.
AIDS epidemic update Figure AIDS epidemic update Figure 2007 Estimated adult (15–49 years) HIV prevalence rate (%) globally and in Sub-Saharan Africa,
CALENDAR.
1 English or Portuguese: language or literature? Richard Hudson Lisbon, May 2007.
CSPP European University Institute, Florence THE POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS OF INTERNET DIFFUSION Professor Richard Rose Director, Centre for the Study of.
1 Positive attitudes are not enough: Minority language survival in the Canadian Prairies Jaya Nagpal & Elena Nicoladis University of Alberta.
Multilingualism, Regional & Minority Languages: Paradigms for Languages of the Wider World School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London,
Linguistic Integration of Adult Migrants Round Table on Language proficiency requirements, language training and assessment For Information: During the.
World Day on the Mall Test Your Diversity Knowledge.
Immigrant Adolescents Cultural Orientation and its Relationship to Academic and Social Adjustment Melissa Kull New York University Many thanks to Sita.
The Labour Market Integration of Immigrants and their Children in Austria Thomas Liebig & Karolin Krause International Migration Division Directorate for.
Media Use in Indonesia Findings from the 2012 International Audience Research Project.
HECUBA DAYCARE - IASI, ROMANIA - A PUBLIC MUNICIPAL ECEC SERVICE-
TCCI Barometer March “Establishing a reliable tool for monitoring the financial, business and social activity in the Prefecture of Thessaloniki”
1 Lincolnshire Research Observatory Lincolnshire’s Changing Population Components of Change and the Demographic Impact Eleanor.
Adult Literacy, by Region
Name of presenter(s) or subtitle Canadian Netizens February 2004.
Opportunities for Prevention & Intervention in Child Maltreatment Investigations Involving Infants in Ontario Barbara Fallon, PhD Assistant Professor Jennifer.
Facebook Pages 101: Your Organization’s Foothold on the Social Web A Volunteer Leader Webinar Sponsored by CACO December 1, 2010 Andrew Gossen, Senior.
TCCI Barometer September “Establishing a reliable tool for monitoring the financial, business and social activity in the Prefecture of Thessaloniki”
2011 WINNISQUAM COMMUNITY SURVEY YOUTH RISK BEHAVIOR GRADES 9-12 STUDENTS=1021.
2011 FRANKLIN COMMUNITY SURVEY YOUTH RISK BEHAVIOR GRADES 9-12 STUDENTS=332.
International Students in the UK Jon Simmons Home Office Science: Migration and Border Analysis.
THE PROBLEM OF DEFINING A MULTILINGUAL REPERTOIRE Silvia Dal Negro (Free University Bolzano, Italy)
Subtraction: Adding UP
The Italian school system
Historical Changes in Stay-at-Home Mothers: 1969 to 2009 American Sociological Association Annual Meeting Atlanta, GA August 14-17, 2010 Rose M. Kreider,
Ministerie van Sociale Zaken en Werkgelegenheid 1 Strengthening EU Competitiveness – Potential of Migrants on the Labour Market The Costs and Benefits.
United Nations Population Division, Demographic dynamics of youth POPULATION DIVISION DESA.
Romania Gheorghe ieica Secondary School Craiova. A set of questions related to migration applied to a number of about 20 migrants.
Student Equity Report Prepared by Berkeley City College, Faculty, Administrators, and Staff May, 2012 Data Sources: PCCD Institutional Research, CCCCO.
Identifying and profiling out of school populations – lessons from the UNICEF/UIS Out of School Children Initiative PISA for Development, Paris,
THE FORMATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BRITISH NATION
Testing and assessment of linguistic-communicative competence in schools: thoughts on L1 and L2 Linguistic Education Monica Barni, Carla Bagna, Sabrina.
Indo-European Branches
Lindsey Miller and Reid Scholz
KICK-OFF MEETING 13 – 14 JANUARY 2011 ROTTERDAM, NL SUMMARIES-NEEDS ANALYSIS Lifelong Learning Programme GRUNDTVIG Multilateral project INTEGRA- Migrants'
ITALY, LAND OF IMMIGRATION. For geographical reasons, our peninsula has been for centuries a meeting point of migration flows and different cultural experiences,
Equal opportunities for women in the political life Romanian Society for Lifelong Learning.
Provincia di Piacenza Servizio Politiche sociali e socio-sanitarie Inti Project Healthy & Wealthy Together: 1st workshop Roquetas de Mar 9 th -11 th June.
Employment, Professional Training and Human Resources Department Ms Sabrina Bondavalli and Ms Francesca Mattioli Employment, Professional Training and.
EUROPEAN DAY OF LANGUAGES. The European Year of Languages 2001 was organised by the Council of Europe and the European Union. Its activities celebrated.
Languages of Europe Romance, Germanic, and Slavic.
34-year-old, from Rimini area (North East of Italy)
Origin & Diffusion of Languages
AIM: How is English related to other languages?
Presentation transcript:

NOTE SU PLURILINGUISMO E REPERTORI LINGUISTICI DI IMMIGRATI NELLITALIA DELLINIZIO DEL XXI SECOLO / SOME REMARKS ON IMMIGRANTS LINGUISTIC REPERTOIRES IN ITALY, AT THE BEGINNING OF THE XXI CENTURY Marina CHINI (University of Pavia) MERIDIUM International Conference, Perugia, November th November – II Session – The impact of migration flows

Schema / Outline 1. Il contesto dellimmigrazione nellItalia di oggi / The context of immigration in contemporary Italy 2. Immigrazione e plurilinguismo in Italia: filoni di studio / Immigration and multilingualism in Italy: some research trends 3. Lingue dorigine e comunità linguistiche immigrate / The native languages and some immigrant linguistic communities 4. Repertori linguistici di alcuni gruppi immigrati / The linguistic repertoires of some immigrant groups 5. Conclusioni, con alcuni spunti comparativi / Conclusions, with some comparative remarks

Some statistical data Official ISTAT data: January 2011, in Italy immigrants, over a population of 60 million = 7.5% Dossier Caritas Migrantes 2011 estimates about 5 million immigrants in Italy in 2010, among which 3 million came to Italy in the last 10 years. Cf. 150 years ago: Italy 1861, immigrants = 0.4%.

International and EU context International level: in the last 10 years the immigrant population in the world grew conspicuously, + 64 million - > now 214 million people + more than 15 million refugees. EU: almost 1 / 10 inhabitants was born in a country different from the country he/she is living in now. In 2009 in EU 32.5 million people had a foreign citizenship, 6.5%. Almost 15 million were naturalized.

Origin of immigrants in Italy Table A: Immigrants with residence permit ( ) (Source: Caritas/Migrantes based on ISTAT) YearOrigin(%) total n. EuropeAfricaAsiaAmerica Oceania others

Main features of immigration in Italy - 1 Unequal distribution of the immigrants on the national territory, see Table 1: 35% North West; 26.3%, North East; 25.2% Center; 13.5% South and Islands. More precisely 24% of them live in Lombardy, about 11-12% in Lazio, Veneto, Emilia Romagna; about 8-9% in Tuscany and Piedmont. In some regions and towns immigrants are about 10-12% of the whole population: Emilia Romagna, Lombardy and Umbria; Brescia, Mantova, Piacenza, Reggio Emilia, Prato. 78.8% of the immigrants are of working age; low mean age, 32 years vs. 44 years of Italians; only 2% of immigrants are more than 65 years old vs. 20% of the Italian population. almost 1 / 10 of the whole working population of Italy is immigrant

Main features of immigration in Italy - 2 frequent mixed marriages, in out of 10. growingly stable phenomenon: acquired Italian citizenship according to ISTAT ( in 2010). growing number of minors, almost 1 million, and of second generation people, almost

Migrants with residence permit in some Italian regions RegionMigrants with residence permit - beginning 2010 Piedmont Lombardy Veneto Friuli-Venezia Giulia Emilia Romagna Tuscany Lazio Campania Abruzzo Apulia Sicily Sardinia ITALY , 22% minors - SOURCE: Dossier Caritas 2010

Immigrant pupils in Italian schools Foreign pupils in Italian schools in : = 7.9%. 35.8% of the total number of foreign pupils are in primary schools; 20.3 % in preschools, 22.3% in junior high schools, 21.6% in senior high schools. Heavy growth in the last years in senior high schools: 14% in > 21.6% in The whole world is represented in Italian schools

First native countries of pupils with non Italian citizenship, – Total n. immigrants Native countryPupils, Total n. of immigrants coming from these countries, I Romania (2011: ) Albania (2011: ) Morocco (2011: ) China (2011: ) Moldova India Philippines Ecuador Tunisia Ukraine

Italian educational policy Focus on teaching Italian L2, intercultural education and dialogue, more than on L1 maintenance (although some pertinent hints are given in several laws) Some laws and regulations: CM 301, ; law 40/1998; Regolamento DPR 394, 1999, etc. CM 24, I Linee guida per laccoglienza e lintegrazione degli alunni stranieri [Guidelines for welcoming and integrating foreign pupils]; the 2007 document of the Italian Ministry of Education La via italiana per la scuola interculturale e lintegrazione degli alunni stranieri [The Italian way to intercultural school and integration of foreign pupils]: Main principles: inclusive policy, promotion of the acquisition of L2 Italian and of intercultural dialogue, care to the uniqueness and relational character of every pupil, [weak] development of multilingualism, parental involvement

A recent resolution of the MIUR January 2010 the It. Ministry of Education and University establishes that 30% is the maximum percentage of foreign pupils in a class, in order to avoid ghettoisation. It also establishes that schools can organize a first phase of language learning for foreign pupils [newly arrived in Italy], before they enter the class or in parallel to their setting-in phase, in order to facilitate their integration in the class; Furthermore schools can organize enhancement courses where it is possible, resorting to teachers from the same school. Therefore it is convenient, in teacher training, to give special attention to methodologies and teaching measures suitable for promoting integration (cf.

Italian L2 in the schools and teacher training Some Italian L2 teaching projects: - MILIA, in the Nineties; - integrated e-learning teacher training project Italiano L2: lingua di contatto, lingua di culture, Some problems: - still few resources at the financial and organizational level for promoting multilingualism and a real intercultural dialogue; - often not enough competence at the pedagogical and linguistic level among teachers; - non systematic intervention in this field; - in principle no special teacher for Italian L2

Some positive sides, inter alia growing expertise and sensitivity among teachers; significant involvement of the civil society and of volunteers; some costless public courses for immigrant adults, also in order to help them getting a certification for ex. in Lombardy;

Some research trends on immigration and language in Italy - 1 a. Studies on immigrants acquisition of Italian as a second language (Banfi 1993, Giacalone Ramat 2003), also with a sociolinguistic perspective on pidginized learner varieties (Orletti 1988), on Italian ethnolects (Vietti 2005). The so-called Pavia Project on L2 Italian: some developmental regularities at the morphological, syntactic level, then also at the lexical and discourse level (cf. Giacalone Ramat 2003, Bernini et al. 2008). Since the Nineties more interaction with European networks on SLA, work on Italian L2 in a comparative perspective: -Vigoni-Project on Italian-German L2 (Dittmar/Giacalone Ramat 1999); -The Learner varieties project, in different phases, coord. MPI of Nijmegen NL, with W. Klein, C. Perdue, then H. Hendriks, C. Dimroth cf.

Some research trends on immigration and language in Italy - 2 b new interest in the entire immigrants linguistic repertoire: first sociolinguistic outlines of the linguistic situation of migrants in Italy [Mioni 1998] and presumptive lists of migrants native languages. Cf. Vedovelli & Villarini National CNR-Agenzia 2000 Project "Le lingue straniere immigrate in Italia" [lit. The immigrated languages in Italy], coord. by Massimo Vedovelli, University for Foreigners of Siena. Six Italian Universities [Bergamo, Cagliari, Milano Bicocca, Pavia, Siena, Verona]. On linguistic repertoires, language maintenance and language shift in some Northern Italy contexts, such as Turin, Pavia, Bergamo, Verona (Chini 2003, 2004; Massariello Merzagora 2004; Chini 2009c; Valentini 2005, 2009; Chini 2009a e 2011), the structure of immigrants repertoires (Guerini 2006; Berruto 2009), presence of immigrant languages in the Italian linguistic landscape (Bagna et al. 2004). Possible rise of ethnolects and their internal variation in Italy [Vietti 2005].

CNR-Agenzia2000 Project – The Pavia research Unit The Pavia research Unit, coord. by M. Chini, with C. Andorno, M. Biazzi, G.M. Interlandi, investigated some sociolinguistic aspects of migration in the Province of Pavia and in Turin in 2002: some qualitative investigations [Chini 2003] a quantitative research based on a questionnaire studied the linguistic repertoire, the linguistic competence and the language uses of 414 immigrant pupils of public schools (9-20 years) and of 171 adults in the same areas, in Pavia and its Province and Turin (Chini 2004)

The main native languages of immigrants in Italy 1) Romanian (21%) 2) Albanian (11%) 3) Moroccan and Tunisian Arabic, various Arabic dialects (13%) 4) Chinese (5%) 5) Ukrainian (and Russian) (4-5%) 6) Tagalog/English (3%) 7) several varieties of Spanish (about 6%). On the whole possibly 122 languages according to Vedovelli/Villarini (2001: ).

Lingue immigrate Some L1 can become or are immigrated languages, i.e. languages socially rooted and potentially able to influence the local linguistic setting [lingue "di sicuro radicamento sociale" in grado "di condizionare lassetto idiomatico locale"; Bagna et al. 2003: 203].

Possible immigrants minority communities in Italy [Source: ISTAT 2011] Country% living in the provincial or regional capitals Five first towns with at least 5000 immigrants in 2011 Romania30.6Rome, Turin, Milan, Padua, Verona Albania27.1Rome, Turino, Genoa, Milan, Florence Morocco22.2Turin, Milan China46.8Milan, Rome, Prato, Turin Ukraine38.6Rome, Neaples, Milan Philippines 80.1Milan, Rome Moldova45.2Rome Poland35.1Rome Peru62.3Milan, Rome, Turin, Florence Ecuador56.9Genoa, Milan, Rome

Criteria for identifying proper immigrant minorities [Lüdi 1990, Chini 2004, 2009a] 1) sufficiently high number of migrants; 2) existence of a migrant community sharing the same culture and language; 3) quite regular and frequent interactions also in L1 within the immigrants community; 4) the migratory project should be definitive (long duration of stay; high number of young immigrants attending schools; important number of naturalizations); 5) creation of (cultural, religious, sport, recreational, union, media) institutions specific of the immigrant community. 6) positive intention to maintain L1.

Immigrants media in Italy 2005 about 50 newspapers and magazines, printed or on the internet, on the whole copies ( copies each); 70% is distributed free of charge. Main languages used in these publications: English and French for Africans; Albanian; Romanian and Italian for Romanians; Spanish for Latin-American immigrants; Portuguese for immigrants from Brazil and Portuguese-speaking African countries; Chinese and sometimes Italian for Chinese people; Arabic, French, Italian for people from Arabic speaking countries; English and Tagalog for media from the Philippines; Polish in media for Polish people; Urdu, Bengali, English, Punjabi, Sinhalese for immigrants from the Indian Region; Russian, Ukrainian and Italian for Ukrainian [and Russian] people in Italy. [Fiorentini 2005]

Immigrants media in Italy in 2007 The 2007 survey of the Cospe organization (Cooperazione per lo Sviluppo dei Paesi Emergenti) found: about 150 newspapers and magazines in immigrants languages: 63 magazines, 59 radio broadcasts, 24 TV broadcasts two thirds of them are born in the last 5 years. cf. Dossier Caritas 2008.

Main immigrants native languages (Pavia and Turin; Chini 2004) Indo-european languages: Albanian, Bengali, Bosnian, Bulgarian, Sinhalese, Croatian, Kurdish, Indian and Iranian dialects, Romance dialects, Farsi or Persian, French, Greek, Hindi, English, Macedonian, Moldavian, Polish, Portuguese, Punjabi, Romany, Serbian, Spanish, Romanian, Russian, German, Ukrainian, Urdu. Languages from other language families: Amarish, several varieties of Arabic, Bata, Berber, Bini or Edo, Standard Chinese, Wu Chinese, several Chinese dialects, African dialects, Diula o Jula, Lingala, Quechua, Swahili, Ruanda, Tagalog, Tigrinya, Twi, Yoruba, Zagon.

Multilingualism before migration Syria: Kurdish/Syrian Arabic Romania: Zagon/Romanian Ukraine: Moldavian/Russian/Ukrainian Ethiopia: Amharic/Tigrinya Nigeria 1: Bini/Edo/English/Pidgin Nigeria 2: English/Yoruba Ghana: English/Twi Angola: Portuguese/Lingala Congo: French/Lingala Morocco: Moroccan Arabic/Berber (Chini 2004)

Language choices with different interlocutors in Italy Verona (n. 267)Pavia (n. 309)Turin (n. 105) L1ITL1+ITL1ITL1+ITL1ITL1+IT %With father %With mother %With brothers/sisters %With grand- parents %With friends (non-it/it.) / /9224.6/ /-25.7/9727.6/- %With neighbours

Scale of language shift to Italian and L1 maintenance in immigrant children SHIFT: school, Italian friends > transactions > non Italian friends > family (brothers/sisters > father > mother > grand-parents MAINTENANCE: grand-parents > father/mother > non Italian friends > brothers/sisters > school, Italian friends, transactions (Chini 2004)

Relevant factors for language use and L1 maintenance native country sex generation length of stay in Italy endogamy parents profession school attendance in the host country school attendance in the native country interlocutors social context of life others (Chini 2004).

The linguistic repertoire of immigrant communities before migration 1) a national language and local related varieties and dialects, sometimes in a diglossia relationship; 2) a national language, (local related varieties) and a minority language; 3) an (international) exolanguage (also in pidginized varieties), sometimes one or more vehicular languages or lingua franca (cf. Wolof in Senegal), national languages, and local varieties and dialects; 4) two widely spread languages, and sometimes more local varieties (i.e. Standard Arabic together with French, besides regional varieties of Arabic, among educated people from Morocco and Tunisia).

Multilingual practices, code mixing and switching mio fratello eh before arbeit lavora Pakistan + tre/äh du/+ anno + Germania ++ and then go/and then gehen Pakistan and eh + una fabbrica + fabrica and then arbeit ålf [elf] person (Pakistani immigrant in Alto Adige – South Tyrol; Banfi 1995: )

Some immigrants linguistic repertoires in Italy Ghanaian community in Bergamo and its province (Guerini 2006) Nigerians in Turin (Berruto 2009) Pakistani immigrants near Milan (Berruto 2009) Peruvian immigrants in Turin (Berruto 2009)

Italian and Romance dialects in immigrants discourse (8) dove vivo io parrano tutti il dialetto – dov|dove vado io a comprare un pane mi fa – rice- quanto taccattari?, cioè quanto taccattare è:: dialetto. e vabbene. piano piano::: mi sono imparato. già delle volte mi trovo difficoltà di parrare italiano perché già ! parro il dialetto meio di::: litaliano vah! (Palermo, Sicily; DAgostino 2004: 207) (9) cera da scegliere far su famiglia + o andare sempre avanti + eh e niente con/ poi è stato + diciamo sta ragazza qui ma no state qui ma qui ma no va ben abbiamo valudato che poi cera il lavoro, cera la casa e qui e là e quindi i conti li abbiam fatti io e lei + ?sè ca fuma [= che cosè che facciamo?] (Lombardy, Chini 2003: 237)

The typology of immigrants repertoires depends on number of languages in the pre-migration repertoire and its complexity; status, functions and prestige of the languages of the original repertoire in the immigration context; presence, function, penetration of Italian and its dialects in the immigrants repertoire; structural distance between the languages of the repertoire; if reduced, probably more contact phenomena (Chini 2009a: 296)

Some conclusions Main results: - principal immigrants languages; - initial language shift also in intra-ethnic domains. Data to collect or topics to elaborate on: statistical data on native languages and language use of immigrants in whole Italy; language attitudes of immigrants and of native residents in regard to the languages of the repertoires, inn regard to multilingual practices and multilingualism; rise and in depth analysis of the sociolinguistic situation of specific new linguistic minorities; possible rise of new ethnolects in Italy; impact of immigrants languages on the Italian "linguistic space" (De Mauro 1980).

Comparing language uses in different immigration contexts - 1 NISU Project in Scandinavia (Boyd & Latomaa 1999): intra-ethnic friendship networks are very conservative in relation to L1 maintenance; % L1 usage among partners from the same country; gradual shift and decreasing L1 maintenance along the following scale [cf. scale for Pavia and Turin]: Maintenance of minority language among immigrants children in the Nordic area: Father or mother of the minority language [ML] > adult of ML > brothers and sisters [younger > older] > father or mother of the majority language (Boyd & Latomaa 1999: )

Comparing language uses in different immigration contexts - 2 Australia: in many immigrants communities L1 is more often used by children with their parents and among the parents, than by the children with brothers and sisters (Clyne & Kipp 1999; Clyne 2003: 42-46). The factor native country: Chinese immigrants and often Moroccan Arabic immigrants show high L1 maintenance (cf. in the Netherlands and in Australia: Extra & Verhoeven 1999: 19; Clyne 2003: 35). Data about Spanish speaking immigrants are less coherent in various areas. Other possible explaining factors: - linguistic and cultural distance; - socio-cultural condition; - settlement patterns in the new country; - migration models - migration phase.

Grazie molte dellattenzione! Thank you very much for your attention! Mulţumes mult! Hvala! Grazzi ħafna! Merci bien! Gracias! Danke sehr!

NOTE SU PLURILINGUISMO E REPERTORI LINGUISTICI DI IMMIGRATI NELLITALIA DELLINIZIO DEL XXI SECOLO / SOME REMARKS ON IMMIGRANTS LINGUISTIC REPERTOIRES IN ITALY, AT THE BEGINNING OF THE XXI CENTURY