1st Edition

Speech Language Therapy as a Global Practice Culture, Context, and Collaboration

Edited By Bea Staley, Chisomo Selemani, Marise Fernandes Copyright 2026
318 Pages 15 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

318 Pages 15 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

318 Pages 15 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Speech Language Therapy as a Global Practice focuses on the necessary skills and considerations needed to be a culturally responsive clinician in a multicultural and multilingual world. The book highlights current issues of global practice and advocates for appropriate ways to engage with global communities. It positions culture, context and collaboration as integral and intertwined... Read more

Introduction

 

Section 1: Challenging the Status Quo

1. Advancing pluriversality with global practices in speech-language and hearing sciences

2. Community is Key: The power of uBuntu and how it can help reshape our practice 

3. Questioning the status quo: How colorism and linguicide impact global practices in speech language therapy and how we can make changes 

4. Social justice through an intersectional lens by Rizwana Mallick

5. The use of translanguaging in the assessment of multilingual discourse

 

Section 2: Considering Culture, Context and Collaboration in Situated Practices

6. Tiyende pamodzi ndi m’tima umo "Let's walk together with one heart": The Story of Speech-Language Therapy and Interprofessional Collaborative Practice in Zambia

7. From Method to Metaphor: Rrambaŋi ga ḻarrum dhukarrwu malaw, Finding a Way Together in Augmentative and Alternative Communication Research 

8. Using a System Strengthening Approach to Nurture Speech-Language Pathology in Cambodia 

9. Volunteering and Studying Abroad: Opportunities, Potential Benefits, and Risks 

10. My Perspective of Each Place has Changed Multiple Times”: A Student Trip to Explore the Emerging Speech Language Therapy Profession in Cambodia 

 

Section 3: Technology and Innovation in Speech Language Therapy Practices

11. Succeeding in Telepractice – A Case Study from Australia

12. Increasing Health Equity Through Digital Health Technologies

13. Empowering Multilingual Voices: Translanguaging and AI as Catalysts for Innovation in Speech-Language Pathology 

14. International Virtual Professional Practicums: Breaking Down Borders and Developing Globally Minded Speech-Language Pathologists

Biography

Chisomo Selemani is an Associate Professor of Communication Sciences and Disorders at Baldwin Wallace University. Her clinical and research interests include literacy enrichment in multicultural and multilingual environments, the utilization of international education as a training mechanism in cultivating culturally responsive practitioners, and international telepractice. She is the coordinator of the award-winning Baldwin Wallace University in Zambia initiative.

Bea Staley is an adjunct Associate Professor in the Faculty of Arts and Society at Charles Darwin University. Bea is a speech language pathologist with decades of paediatric experience who has lived and worked in the United States, Kenya, the Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands and Australia. Bea is interested in issues of equity, social justice, and innovation in speech language pathology service provision, and in the overlap between the health and education disciplines.

Marise Fernandes has spent over 30 years living and working as a Speech and Language Therapist and educator in the United Kingdom, Fiji, Philippines, India, Uganda and the USA. Her focus is on the development of socially just support for people experiencing communication difficulty in Majority World contexts. Marise’s emphasis is on the need for the employment of global public health theory and approaches, individual and systems capacity strengthening, alternative/decolonised approaches to service delivery, and the necessity of interdisciplinary education and collaboration.