Thank you very much to everyone who responded to my question about state literacy statistics! Your responses were very helpful. I am actually using your perspectives and sources to inform a section of a paper I am finishing up about literacy in a minority language. The paper is titled "The Ideology of Literate Speakerhood in Interactions between Adult Gaelic Learners and First-Language Gaelic Speakers in Scotland", and it will be coming out in vol. 26 of the journal Scottish Gaelic Studies this November (with a footnote thanking everyone of course!). <br>
<br>I had wanted to find some statistics on adult literacy rates in English in the UK to compare with various government-generated reports on adult literacy in Scotland, and to use all of this and the critique of states' ideological concerns with offical state language literacy to provide a wider perspective for my discussion of the 2001 Scottish census statistics on Scottish Gaelic literacy. <br>
<br>The very interesting thing, if one follows the trail from Wikipedia to the UN to the UNESCO Institute of Statistics, is that the UNESCO IS doesn't actually have a literacy rate figure for the UK. The figure of 99% literacy for the UK quoted in Wikipedia (drawn from the UN Human Development Report 2009) was a made-up figure created as a stand-in so that the UN report authors could calculate the UK's 2007 Human Development Index score. They did this for quite a few of the states, but there is no rationale given for it in the footnotes of the table! More grist for the mill...<br>
<br>Thank you,<br><br>Emily McEwan-Fujita<br>