Stockholm university

Research group MOB – Meta-research on bilingualism

The researchers in this group are united by a shared interest in research on bilingualism research. We analyze scientific fields such as bi- and multilingualism research and Swedish as a Second language with a view of grasping, for example, patterns of recruitment or the histories of central concepts and their effects within and beyond the fields.

This research group gathers scholars with an interest in grasping ways in which our fields of research have been formed and how different knowledge objects have developed over time. Our research questions tend to be meta-scientific in nature. We interrogate, for example, the role and ramifications of the language sciences vis-à-vis objects such as mother tongue instruction – in policy and in practice, in historical and contemporaneous times. 

Bilingualism and historical epistemology constitutes a central thematic strand. We often adopt an intellectual history approach to questions that in various ways concern bi- and multilingualism, Swedish as a second language and other related areas. Other knowledge interests pertain to recruitment within the fields, or to reproduction of knowledge through their journals. Another salient concern is societal impact and the study of the ways in which knowledge from these areas influence societies in long term and short-term perspectives.

Group members

Group managers

Linus Salö

Professor

The Department of Swedish Language and Multilingualism
Linus Salö

Members

Niclas Abrahamsson

Professor

The Department of Swedish Language and Multilingualism
Niclas framför en bokhylla.

David Karlander

Associate senior lecturer

Uppsala University, Department of Scandinavian Languages

Scarlett Mannish

Doktorand

The Department of Swedish Language and Multilingualism
Profile Picture Scarlett Mannish

Gunnar Norrman

Universitetslektor

The Department of Swedish Language and Multilingualism

Klara Skogmyr Marian

Docent, Universitetslektor

The Department of Swedish Language and Multilingualism
Profile pic. Dec. 2021

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