KEYNOTE speakers

Kathleen Heugh

University of South Australia, Australia

Kathleen Heugh, former Professor of Language Education and Multilingualism, in the  Centre for Research in Educational and Social Inclusion, University of South Australia. Inspired by earlier and current scholars in Africa and India, Kathleen’s research in applied and socio- linguistics since 1980 has focussed on postcolonial and decolonial language education policy and planning in Africa, later broadening to include Central and South Asia, and Australia.
Her research draws on archival and firsthand field research in remote, rural, and urban settings. Her leadership roles include proposals for Multilingual Education in South Africa with colleagues in the National Language Project (1995), as language and literacy expert for the Pan South African Language Board (1996-2001), initiating the first national Sociolinguistic Survey of South Africa (PanSALB 2001), and the first (international) system-wide multilingual language and mathematics assessment for secondary students (HSRC 2007). She was lead researcher for several UNDP and UNESCO system-wide and multi-country studies (2005-2020). She has served as language policy advisor to ministers of education in Ethiopia, India, the Russian Federation, South Africa, Uganda; and in transnational forums (Association for the Development of Education in Africa, South East Asian Ministers of Education Organisation, and Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe). The advisory role includes multilingual pedagogy, theory and teacher education for local, national, and transnational education for displaced, Indigenous, migrant and refugee communities. With Christopher Stroud she works towards re-centring ‘Southern Multilingualisms’, ‘Transknowledging’ and ‘Linguistic Citizenship’ as central to a humanity of care and compassion on the road towards decoloniality.

Lynn Mario T. Menezes de Souza

University of São Paulo, Brazil

Lynn Mario T. Menezes de Souza began his career at Eduardo Mondlane University in Mozambique in the 1970s and has been senior full professor at the Modern Languages Department of the University of São Paulo, Brazil, for almost four decades. He supervises doctoral and post-doctoral research in language policy, literacy studies and educational linguistics from anti-racist and decolonial perspectives.
He has been a Visiting Professor in Canada, Italy, India, Australia and South Africa.
His publications include the co-edited volumes: Postcolonial Perspectives on Global Citizenship Education (2012) and Glocal Languages and Critical Intercultural Awareness: the south answers back (2019). His most recent publications in English include A Conversation with Lynn Mario Menezes de Souza in Deumert & Makoni (eds) (2023) From Southern Theory to Decolonizing Sociolinguistics: Voices, Questions and Alternatives; the chapter Coloniality, Epistemicide and Language Learning in Brazil (2024) in Limerick, N. et al (Eds) Multilingual Nations, Monolingual Schools; the article Kshetra and the nurturing of a plurilingual ethos (2024) in the Journal of Multilingual Theories and Practices; and the chapter ‘Southernizing Linguistics’ (2025) in Entanglements: Between Decolonial and Southernizing Linguistics, Makoni, S. et al (Eds.).

Professor Nana Aba Appiah Amfo

University of Ghana, Ghana

Professor Nana Aba Appiah Amfo is a Professor of Linguistics and the first female Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ghana. A leading scholar in pragmatics, discourse analysis, and sociolinguistics, her research explores how language functions in social domains such as health, religion, gender, and politics. She has published widely in international journals and volumes, contributing to the understanding of African multilingualism and pragmatics.
Professor Amfo serves as Vice-Chair of the African Research Universities Alliance (ARUA), Council Member of the Association of Commonwealth Universities, President of the Fédération Internationale des Langues et Littératures Modernes (FILLM), and Founding President of the African Humanities Association. She is also a Fellow of the Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Her leadership at the University of Ghana is anchored in advancing transformative student experiences, impactful research, and sustainable partnerships. Beyond academia, she is an advocate for inclusive leadership and gender equity in higher education. She was recently honoured by the Association of African Universities (AAU) as the AAU Ambassador for Gender Equity and Social Inclusion. Professor Amfo has delivered keynote addresses and lectures across more than thirty countries, inspiring conversations on language, identity, and the decolonization of knowledge in Africa and beyond.

Shaila Sultana

BRAC University, Bangladesh

Shaila Sultana is the Director and Professor of BRAC Institute of Language (BIL), BRAC University, Bangladesh. She is also a Professor (on leave) and the former Head of the Department of English Language, Institute of Modern Languages, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh. She has been educated at Jahangirnagar University (Bangladesh), Monash University (Australia), King’s College London (UK), and the University of Technology Sydney (Australia).

Shaila Sultana has interests in critical sociolinguistics, language and nationalism, religionism, and genderism, trans-approaches to language and identity, language in popular culture and social media, and decolonisation and deeliticisation of English in post-colonial contexts. She is dedicated to expanding the recognition of sociolinguistics as a field of research among young academics and researchers in Bangladesh and raising their awareness of the significance of sociolinguistics in advancing linguistic rights, social justice, and equity in the Global South. The first books on sociolinguistics and English language education in Bangladesh, Language in Society in Bangladesh and Beyond: Voices of the Unheard in the Global South (Routledge, USA) and Routledge Handbook of English Language Education in Bangladesh (Routledge, UK) were edited by Shaila Sultana and her colleagues.

Other recent publications of Shaila Sultana include a co-authored book, Popular Culture, Voice and Linguistic Diversity (Palgrave McMillan, USA), co-edited books,  Language and Sustainable Development in Bangladesh (Routledge, UK), Translingual Practices in English Language Education in South Asia: Inclusivity and Equity (in press, Multilingual Matters), Remote and Online Language Teaching and Learning (in press, Universiti Sains Malaysia Press, Malaysia) and a Special Issue of Australian Review of Applied Linguistics titled ‘Translingual practices entangled with semiotised space and time’. Shaila Sultana is on the editorial boards of Language in Society (Cambridge University Press), Cambridge Elements in Language and Power (Cambridge University Press), Journal of English-medium Instruction (John Benjamins), Ampersand (Elsevier), Journal of AsiaTEFL, Journal of Education, Language, and Ideology (JELI), Crossing, Journal of BELTA, and other journals.

With more than 80 articles and chapters in top-tiered peer-reviewed journals and books,  Shaila Sultana has been the most cited author in ‘Linguistics and Literature’ at the University of Dhaka and Bangladesh since 2021 (according to the AD Scientific Index).

Stef Slembrouck

Ghent University, Belgium

Stef Slembrouck, Senior Full Professor at Ghent University (Belgium), is recognized for his work on discourse and the functioning of institutions. His research bridges sociolinguistic theory and real-world communicative practices, exploring how language shapes institutional interaction, often with explicit reference to the challenges posed by today’s multilingual and globalized environments. He has published widely on the nature of communicative and interactional practices in education, welfare, health and public administration. He has collaborated internationally on various projects of academic capacity building with the University of the Western Cape in South Africa.

Professor Marcelyn Oostendorp

Stellenbosch University, South Africa

Marcelyn Oostendorp is an Associate Professor in the Department of General Linguistics at Stellenbosch University, South Africa. Her research is primarily concerned with multilingual and multimodal forms of meaning-making in contexts such as education, the media, and the workplace. In recent years her research has been focused on refiguring the languaging human in current sociolinguistic theory. Her work has appeared in journals such as Applied Linguistics, Critical Discourse Studies, and International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism. She is an associate editor of Journal of Sociolinguistics and one of the co-editors of the first Handbook of Language and Trauma. 

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