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Status and Corpus Planning

Language planning is conventionally divided into status planning, which assigns functions to a language, and corpus planning, which shapes its form, with acquisition planning added to address its teaching.

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Definition

Status and corpus planning are the two classic components of language planning: status planning concerns decisions about the social functions and official roles of a language, while corpus planning concerns deliberate changes to its structure, including its writing system, norms, and vocabulary.

Scope

This topic covers the foundational typology of language planning: status planning (officialization, function allocation), corpus planning (graphization, standardization, modernization of vocabulary), and acquisition planning (spreading a language through education). It includes Haugen's four-step model of selection, codification, implementation, and elaboration. The specific process of standardization is detailed in its own topic, and the politics of education in another.

Core questions

  • How is status planning distinguished from corpus planning?
  • What does Haugen's model of selection, codification, implementation, and elaboration describe?
  • How is acquisition planning related to the other components?
  • How do status and corpus decisions interact in practice?

Key concepts

  • Status planning
  • Corpus planning
  • Acquisition planning
  • Haugen's planning model
  • Graphization, standardization, modernization

Key theories

Status-corpus distinction
Kloss separated planning aimed at a language's social standing and functions (status) from planning aimed at its internal form (corpus), a division that organizes the whole field.
Haugen's planning model
Haugen described language planning as a sequence of selecting a norm, codifying its form, implementing it through institutions, and elaborating it to meet new functions.

History

The status-corpus distinction was drawn by Kloss in 1969 and complemented by Haugen's model of the planning process; Cooper added acquisition planning in 1989, completing the standard tripartite framework.

Key figures

  • Heinz Kloss
  • Einar Haugen
  • Robert Cooper

Related topics

Seminal works

  • kloss1969
  • cooper1989
  • haugen1983

Frequently asked questions

Where does acquisition planning fit in?
Acquisition planning, added by Cooper, concerns increasing the number of users of a language, typically through education, complementing status planning (its functions) and corpus planning (its form).

Methods for this concept

Related concepts