Chapter One. Corsica, the poor relation. Defining language policy. Manipulation and intervention. The principal actors. Motivation. Reversing a language shift. The warp and the weft of language policy on Corsica.-
Chapter Two. Corsica, a Genoese island. Corsica and the Ancien Regime. The Revolution of 1789. The Revolution on Corsica. The Revolutionaries and language attitudes. Language management in a new France. Post-Revolutionary language management - a Corsican perspective. Empire and the French century. Language-in-education planning in the nineteenth century. The Napoleonic Era. The July Monarchy and the Second Empire.-
Chapter Three. The Third Republic and a new century. Ferry and language-in-education policies. The national stage.- The Corsican dimension. Corsica's linguistic landscape. Extra-linguistic factors in language beliefs and practices. Language activism and the seeds of regionalism. Language beliefs and the spectre of Mussolini. War, occupation and the myth of a Latin brotherhood. The Post-War Period. Language management from the French Republic. Post-war language activism. The islanders' response.-
Chapter Four. The loi Deixonne - language management against the grain. Language activism influencing language management. Decolonisation and the growth of regionalism. The overshadowing of language activism. Language management to defend French.Language management to cloister Corsican. Aleria. Language activism in the 1970s.Three strands of language management. Language activism and reversing the language shift.-
Chapter Five. The final decades of the twentieth century. Decentralisation for France, devolution for Corsica. Language activists within the administration of Corsica. La Collectivite Territoriale de Corse.- Language management to defend French. New agents in language policy. The European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages. The French State's response to the Charter. The Charter in a Corsican context. The local implications of the national impasse.-
Chapter Six. Language beliefs influencing language management. Interpreting language management from Paris. The circulaire Bayrou on Corsica. The Matignon Accords - another threshold crossed. Evaluating the progress of Corsican language education. A new plan for language management. An acknowledgement of language realities. Language management beyond the school precincts. Action plans for language management.-
Chapter Seven. The islanders - a longitudinal study. Procedures. Types of question. The profiles of the respondents. Results. Basic language practices. Corsican spoken in families. Non-corsophones learning Corsican. Corsican as a marker of identity. The response to language management. Mother-tongue transmission. The first stage - language beliefs. The second stage - the evolution of beliefs into practices. The distribution of responsibilities according to personal ability.-
Chapter Eight. The conclusions - two languages, two policies? The language activists. The State. The islanders. Appendix A. Bibliography.