“This book is an important contribution to research on a topic that has been neglected in the academic field of comparative education and sidelined in the EFA/SDG policy discourse. A balanced combination of context-specific and comparative analyses, it opens nuanced perspectives on the issues of multilingual education policy and practice in their wider socio-cultural contexts, complemented with suggestions for needed further research.” – Tuomas Takala, Professor Emeritus of Comparative Education, University of Tampere“First language-based multilingual education is one of the most formidable strategies for inclusion. The lessons in this book will help policy makers in governments improve their own basic education systems to ensure that the learner is in the center of education implementation.” – Dina Ocampo, Professor, College of Education, University of the Philippines “This volume contributes a timely, authoritative argument for the use of non-dominant languages in education as an essential component of achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals for education. The chapters in this volume demonstrate that the keys to linguistic sustainability are language-in-education policies and teaching practices that recognize children’s first languages as valued resources for their communities, their nations, and the world.” – Jessica Ball, Professor, School of Child and Youth Care, University of Victoria“At a time when most of the news is bad–pandemic, unemployment, climate change, 40% of children cannot understand their teachers—it is very cheerful to have an account of serious efforts to correct one of these problems. This collection reports a number of efforts to provide education in the home language of pupils, describing promising cases to provide mother language education. It deserves to be widely read.” – Bernard Spolsky, Professor Emeritus of English, Bar-Ilan University