Sign Languages recognized in Latin America

Maartje De Meulder maartje.demeulder at VERBEELD.BE
Sat Jan 4 19:47:19 UTC 2014


Dear Barbara,

I'm a PhD researcher at the University of Jyväskylä (Finland) working on sign language recognition legislation. I have accurate info for Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador and Venezuela. I will send this to you in a separate document.

If anyone can provide info for Costa Rica, Cuba, El Salvador and Panama, I would be very grateful as well!

Best wishes

Maartje De Meulder


Op 3-jan.-2014, om 19:36 heeft Barbara Gerner De Garcia <barbara.gerner.de.garcia at GALLAUDET.EDU> het volgende geschreven:

> I am trying to create an accurate list of Sign Languages in Latin America recognized by their governments.  According to the WFD’s 2009 report Deaf People and Human Rights, the following Latin American countries recognize the sign language used by Deaf people in the country:  Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Mexico, Panama, Venezuela. Furthermore, I found that Chile has since 2010 (Biblioteca Nacional de Chile, 2013), and Uruguay since 2001 (Republica Oriental del Uruguay, n.d.).  I am not confident that the list from WFD is 100% accurate as I have come across some inaccuracies in the 2009 report. Any help or suggestions are welcome.
> 
> 
> 
> Barbara Gerner de Garcia
> 
> 
> --
> 
> 
> On Tue, Dec 3, 2013 at 6:08 AM, Mike Morgan <mwmosaka at gmail.com> wrote:
> a group of us sign language researchers, mostly based in Nepal and India, have been asked to write up an article on "Sign Languages in South Asia" for a NEW encyclopedia of deaf studies.
> 
> As members of the group focuses on Sign languages of Nepal and India (although among us we also have soem experience with a couple other neighboruing sign languages), we are interested in collecting basic information on Sign Languages of the other South Asian countries (in order that the article can have a bit of "balance" ... and to balance decades of misleading info regarding the relation between sign languages of the region (e.g. Nepali Sign Language is clearly NOT closely related to IPSL).
> 
> We already have info from researchers on SL of the Maldives, and have some materials as well (varying qauntity and quality) on sign languages in Pakistan (esp Karachi) and Sri lanka... but can always do with corroborating (or opposing) info.
> 
> Also, we have enough info on the various so-called "village sign languages" of the subcontinent.
> 
> Anyone with first-hand linguistically informed knowledge of any of the remaining sign languages (especially: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan), 
> 
> as the word limit for the article is quite low (1,000 words), the following basic info is mostly what is required:
> 1) what is the name of the sign lanuage (in local language(s)
> 2) how standardized is the sign language
> 3) how different is it (lexically, and/or grammatically) from neighbouring sign languages, and from British Sign Language and/or American Sign Language
> 4) is there a dictionary for the sign language, and if so, how many lexical items are in the dictionary
> 5) what research (if any) is there in/on the sign language
> 6) what finger spelling system(s) is/are generally used within the Deaf community?
> 
> thanks to all for any help you can provide
> 
> mike || U C > || мика  || माईक || মাঈক || માઈક || ਮਾਈਕ || மாஇக || マイク || მაიკ || ማይክ
> +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>            (( Michael W Morgan, PhD ))
>    (new position to be announced shortly!)
> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> "People interested only in the bottom line, seem to have forgotten that the stars are in the oposite direction" (anon)
> -------
> Mos u fshi si miza nën bishtin e kalit.
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Dr. Barbara Gerner de Garcia, Professor 
> Department of Education
> Gallaudet University
> 800 Florida Ave NE
> Washington, DC 20002-3695
> 
> Phone: 202-651-5207



-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
"Our lives begin to end
the day we become silent
about things that matter."
-- Martin Luther King Jr. --















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