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Introduction to the handbook series  xi


                          the theoretical and methodological standards of cooperating experts from other
                          disciplines, as well as the conceptual and practical standards of the practitio-
                          ners who are confronted with the practical problems in the first place. Thus, as
                          Sarangi and van Leeuwen (2003) point out, applied linguists have to become
                          part of the respective “community of practice”.
                             If, however, applied linguists have to regard themselves as part of a commu-
                          nity of practice, it is obvious that it is the entire community which determines
                          what the respective subject matter is that the applied linguist deals with and
                          how. In particular, it is the respective community of practice which determines
                          which problems of the practitioners have to be considered. The consequence of
                          this is that applied linguistics can be understood from very comprehensive to
                          very specific, depending on what kind of problems are considered relevant by
                          the respective community. Of course, this participative understanding of applied
                          linguistics also has consequences for the Handbooks of Applied Linguistics
                          both with respect to the subjects covered and the way they are theoretically and
                          practically treated.



                          3.     Applied linguistics for problem solving

                          Against this background, it seems reasonable not to define applied linguistics as
                          an autonomous discipline or even only to delimit it by specifying a set of sub-
                          jects it is supposed to study and typical disciplinary approaches it should use.
                          Rather, in line with the collaborative and participatory perspective of the com-
                          munities of practice applied linguists are involved in, this handbook series is
                          based on the assumption that applied linguistics is a specific, problem-oriented
                          way of “doing linguistics” related to the real-life world. In other words: applied
                          linguistics is conceived of here as “linguistics for problem solving”.
                             To outline what we think is distinctive about this area of inquiry: Entirely
                          in line with Popper’s conception of science, we take it that applied linguistics
                          starts from the assumption of an imperfect world in the areas of language and
                          communication. This means, firstly, that linguistic and communicative compet-
                          ence in individuals, like other forms of human knowledge, is fragmentary and
                          defective – if it exists at all. To express it more pointedly: Human linguistic and
                          communicative behaviour is not “perfect”. And on a different level, this imper-
                          fection also applies to the use and status of language and communication in and
                          among groups or societies.
                             Secondly, we take it that applied linguists are convinced that the imperfec-
                          tion both of individual linguistic and communicative behaviour and language
                          based relations between groups and societies can be clarified, understood and to
                          some extent resolved by their intervention, e.g. by means of education, training
                          or consultancy.
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