02254nam 2200505 a 450 991069508180332120060417112947.0(CKB)5470000002365899(OCoLC)66900347(EXLCZ)99547000000236589920060417d2006 ua 0engurmn|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierSocial security numbers[electronic resource] coordinated approach to SSN data could help reduce unauthorized work : testimony before the Subcommittees on Social Security and on Oversight, Committee on Ways and Means, House of Representatives /statement of Barbara D. Bovbjerg[Washington, D.C.] :U.S. Government Accountability Office,[2006]12 pages digital, PDF fileTestimony ;GAO-06-458 TTitle from title screen (viewed on Apr. 3, 2006)."For release ... February 16, 2006."Paper version available from: U.S. Government Accountability Office, 441 G St., NW, Rm. LM, Washington, D.C. 20548.Includes bibliographical references.Social security numbers NoncitizensUnited StatesIdentificationIllegal immigrationUnited StatesIdentificationSocial security recordsUnited StatesData processingFinancial statementsUnited StatesData processingIllegal immigrationNoncitizensIdentification.Illegal immigrationIdentification.Social security recordsData processing.Financial statementsData processing.Illegal immigration.Bovbjerg Barbara D1380758United States.Congress.House.Committee on Ways and Means.Subcommittee on Social Security.United States.Congress.House.Committee on Ways and Means.Subcommittee on Oversight.United States.Government Accountability Office.GPOGPOBOOK9910695081803321Social security numbers3422787UNINA04599nam 22006495 450 991035785520332120240307125331.09783030243401303024340010.1007/978-3-030-24340-1(CKB)4100000009845031(MiAaPQ)EBC5977081(DE-He213)978-3-030-24340-1(EXLCZ)99410000000984503120191111d2019 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierMinority Languages from Western Europe and Russia Comparative Approaches and Categorical Configurations /edited by Svetlana Moskvitcheva, Alain Viaut1st ed. 2019.Cham :Springer International Publishing :Imprint: Springer,2019.1 online resource (166 pages)Language Policy,2452-1027 ;219783030243395 3030243397 An Introduction to comparing Categorizations of Minority Languages; S. Moskvitcheva and A. Viaut -- Part I: Comparative Approach -- Reflections on a Multidisciplinary Approach to "Minority Languages" as a Legal Object in Europe: the Categorization of Regional and Minority Languages under the Charter; O. Dubos and V. Gusut -- Reflection on a Multidisciplinary Approach to "Minority Languages" as a Linguistic Object in Europe; A. Viaut -- The Epistemological Significance of Comparing Social and Scientific Approaches to Minority Languages in France and Spain; C. Lagarde -- Part II: Areal and Typological Configurations -- Prototypical Notions of Minority Languages in the Soviet Union and Russia: "Native Language" (rodnoj âzyk) and "National Language"(nacional'nij âzyk); S. Moskvitcheva -- The Categorization of the Languages in Ingria and the Language Loyalty of their Native Speakers; T. Agranat -- Categorization of Minor Pamir Languages in Tajikistan; L. Dodykhudoeva -- From Nominations of Socio-Ethnic Groups to Categorization of Minority Languages in China: Semantic Analysis; L. Xue -- Typology of Migration Languages and Linguistic Representations in a Bicultural Situation; A. Pascaud -- Social and political status of "non-classical" diasporas on the territory of the ex-USSR; E. Nedopekina -- Categorization of the Chuvash Language in the Chuvash Republic and Beyond; M. Kutsaeva.This book offers a comparative approach within a general framework of studies on minority languages of Western Europe and Russia and former Soviet space, focusing on linguistic, legal and categorization aspects. It is connected to a comparative study of the semantic contents of the terms referring to the different categories of these languages. The volume features multidisciplinary approaches, first linguistic (sociolinguistic and semantic) and legal, and investigates the limits of country-to-country comparisons, mirroring cases from France, Spain, and China with their counterparts from Soviet and later Russian configurations. Special examples, from a region as Ingria and a country as Tajikistan, help to contextualize this approach. In addition, the notion of migration languages, also minority languages, is studied in bilingual contexts, both from external (German, Greek, Chinese ...) and internal origins (Chuvash), linked to the urbanization in contemporary societies that has fostered the presence of these languages in major cities.Language Policy,2452-1027 ;21Education and stateLanguage policyInternational educationComparative educationEducational Policy and PoliticsLanguage Policy and PlanningEducation PolicyInternational and Comparative EducationEducation and state.Language policy.International education.Comparative education.Educational Policy and Politics.Language Policy and Planning.Education Policy.International and Comparative Education.305.7305.7Moskvitcheva Svetlanaedthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edtViaut Alainedthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edtMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910357855203321Minority Languages from Western Europe and Russia2544008UNINA