FYI: UNESCO study RE: endangered languages
Scott McGinnis
smcginnis at nflc.org
Thu Feb 21 17:31:41 UTC 2002
With thanks to Hal Schiffman at Penn for this tip....
New York Times, February 20, 2002
UNESCO: 3, 000 Languages Could Die Off
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PARIS (AP) -- About half of the world's 6,000 languages are under threat
of disappearing under pressure from more dominant tongues or repressive
government policies, a new study says.
>>From France and Russia to the Americas and Australia, minority
>languages
and the heritage that goes along with them are at risk of dying out,
according to a UNESCO study to be released Thursday.
``Today, at least 3,000 tongues are endangered, seriously endangered or
dying in many parts of the world,'' said a statement by the Paris-based
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
``With the death and disappearance of ... a language, an irreplaceable
unit in our knowledge and understanding of human thought and world-view
is lost forever.''
The 90-page study, ``Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger of
Disappearing,'' said the Americas and Australia had the worst record. In
Australia, hundreds of Aboriginal languages are now extinct as a result
of harsh assimilation policies in place until the 1970s.
``In the United States, less than 150 Indian languages have survived out
of several hundreds that were spoken before the arrival of the
Europeans,'' the study said, adding that discrimination lessened in the
1970s but English-only policies increased with a wave of conservatism in
the 1980s.
The study identifies ``crisis areas'' such as Taiwan, where more than
half of the 23 local languages ``are yielding to the pressures of
Chinese,'' and New Caledonia, where French has replaced regional
tongues.
It also lists about 50 languages at risk in Europe, including 14
languages in France and several of the Saami or Lappish tongues spoken
in Scandinavia and northern Russia.
According to the study, a native language can disappear when its
speakers relocate and are required to speak the dominant tongue to get a
job and function in the new society, or because they confront a more
aggressive or economically stronger culture.
In Asia, the study says, the situation for minority languages ``is
uncertain in many parts of China'' due to pressure from authorities.
Linguistic diversity, however, is thriving in the Pacific region --
which includes Japan, the Philippines, Indonesia and Papua New Guinea --
which accounts for more than 2,000 living languages, or a third of the
world total.
Widespread bilingual or multilingual government policies on the Indian
subcontinent have helped keep local languages alive there, and some
tongues have even been resurrected through intensive revival campaigns
-- including Cornish in southern England and the Ainu language in Japan,
the study said.
In Africa, roughly 550 of the 1,400 local languages are on the decline,
with 250 of those under immediate threat.
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