<font face="times new roman,serif">State of the World's Indigenous Peoples<br><a href="http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/unpfii/en/sowip.html">http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/unpfii/en/sowip.html</a><br><br>Highlight Excerpt:<br>
<br>90 per cent of all languages will disappear within 100 years. It is usually estimated that there are between 6,000<br>and 7,000 oral languages in the world today. Most of these languages are spoken by very few people, while a<br>
handful of them are spoken by an overwhelming majority of the world. About 97 per cent of the world’s population<br>speaks 4 per cent of its languages, while only 3 per cent speaks 96 per cent of them. A great majority of these<br>
languages are spoken by indigenous peoples, and many (if not most) of them are in danger of becoming extinct.<br>Roughly 90 per cent of all existing languages may become extinct within the next 100 years.<br><br>Dying languages, damaging communities. While some indigenous peoples are successfully revitalising languages,<br>
many others are fighting a losing battle, where languages are simply no longer passed from one generation to the<br>next. Most governments are aware of this language crisis but funding is often provided only for the recording of<br>
languages, while limited funds are diverted to language revitalization programmes. Language, furthermore, is not<br>only a communication tool, it is often linked to the land or region traditionally occupied by indigenous peoples; it<br>
is an essential component of one’s collective and individual identity and therefore provides a sense of belonging<br>and community. When the language dies, that sense of community is damaged.<br></font>