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Feb 22, 2022

Where Languages are Dying

Oceania is the region with the most languages classified as threatened or endangered to some degree (733) while Asia is home to a similarly high level of at-risk languages (693).
Representative image. Photo: Nikhita S/Unsplash

As UNESCO prepares to celebrate International Mother Language Day 2022 on February 21, data from the Endangered Languages Project analysed by Statista reveals that thousands of languages from around the world are currently in danger of dying out. The role of languages in the DNA of cultures and the importance they hold as frameworks upon which our societies develop, cannot be overstated.

There are many reasons for languages dying, but there are few cases which shouldn’t be treated with a degree of sadness and without acknowledgement of what has been lost. Languages evolve to reflect the environment in which they are applied, as well as the people and the cultures that are utilising and adapting them as time passes by.

As our infographic shows, Oceania is the region with the most languages classified as threatened or endangered to some degree (733). Asia is home to a similarly high level of at-risk languages (693), while Africa may also be close to losing some 428 mother tongues. The Americas and Europe combine to make a total around the 2,500 mark at the start of 2022.

Globalisation is a significant killer of languages, as a 2014 research paper by Amano et al. states: “The dominating effect of a single socioeconomic factor, GDP per capita, on speaker growth rate suggests that economic growth and globalisation are primary drivers of recent language speaker declines (mainly since the 1970s onwards), for instance, via associated political and educational developments and globalised socioeconomic dynamics.”

Infographic: Where Languages are Dying | Statista

You will find more infographics at Statista where this article was originally published. 

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