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Abstract
For decades, international development has been trapped in a colonial linguistic straitjacket, privileging European languages while marginalizing African vernaculars. This study cracks open that paradigm through an unprecedented case- the American Peace Corps' accidental success using Cameroon Pidgin English as their primary development medium. Analyzing forty-four items of field questionnaire administered to forty-five participants across agricultural, educational, and health interventions in Cameroon's Northwest region, the study employs a triangulated methodology integrating Social Interactionism to examine how Pidgin English mediates knowledge construction between volunteers and communities, Critical Discourse Analysis to interrogate institutional power dynamics shaping language choice, and Semiotics to decode the cultural symbols through which development interventions acquire legitimacy. The evidence reveals that Pidgin English significantly outperformed standard English in knowledge transfer across all sectors, with comprehension gains exceeding thirty percentage points in health messaging and near-universal adoption of agricultural techniques. Volunteers who deployed Pidgin English proverbs and vernacular registers achieved what English-language manuals could not—they were granted traditional titles, incorporated into kinship networks, and positioned as legitimate development actors rather than external benefactors. Development interventions became sustainable not when communities acquired English proficiency but when innovation was communicated through African linguistic frameworks enabling epistemic appropriation. From these findings, the study advances Developmental Sociolinguistics as a new interdisciplinary framework positioning hybrid languages as essential communicative infrastructure for participatory development. The framework is organized around the Three Laws of Linguistic Justice—Epistemic Access, Discursive Parity, and Sovereignty—as normative axioms for development praxis, and operationalized through the Pidgin Protocol for decolonizing aid work. Grounded in Social Interactionist principles of guided participation, this research proves that Pidgin English is not "broken English" but repaired development, demonstrating that most projects attributed to communication gaps are, in their deepest structure, language sovereignty crises demanding political rather than technical remediation.
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JEL classification:
- R00 - Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics - - General - - - General
- Z0 - Other Special Topics - - General
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