[Corpora-List] Endangered Languages Project

From: info@eldp.soas.ac.uk
Date: Fri Jul 26 2002 - 13:08:18 MET DST

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    Press Release

    To help explore and record linguistic diversity across the globe, a British
    foundation has provided £20,000,000 over ten years to create an
    international scholarly program to study endangered languages.

    The scale of the funding is commensurate with the urgent--and
    enormous--threat to the world's linguistic diversity. Many of the languages
    that will be studied are linguistic isolates. All are very nearly extinct.
    They have never been adequately analysed or recorded, and they are typically
    spoken only by a few elderly people. These languages--and their
    speakers--deserve to be remembered, and to take their place in history. At
    the same time, this worldwide project to preserve crucial knowledge about
    the world's linguistic heritage will vitally illuminate the history of how
    humanity settled the earth.

    The Lisbet Rausing Charitable Fund aims to support research in the
    humanities and the social sciences. This grant, together with other family
    benefactions amounting to many millions of pounds, is intended by the Hans
    Rausing family to help British universities maintain the highest standards
    of academic scholarship.

    When deciding to secure the participation of SOAS in this program--a process
    that took many months of consultation--the Fund's trustees expressed the
    greatest confidence in the achievements and potential of the School, and in
    enthusiasm and dedication of its scholars and leaders. The trustees were
    impressed by the fit between their own profound concern at the threat to
    knowledge of linguistic and cultural diversity globally, and SOAS's
    long-standing and distinguished study of small languages in Africa, Asia,
    the Middle East and elsewhere. The Fund's trustees also share with SOAS a
    commitment to the highest ethical standards when co-operating with small
    language communities-- people who are often marginalized and dispossessed.

    Part of the grant will underwrite an academic programme within SOAS,
    utilising SOAS's staff and facilities. It will train field-workers and
    deepen knowledge of endangered languages through specially designed courses
    in field linguistics generally and endangered languages in particular as
    well as by co-ordinating scholarly activity, publicity and consultation in
    the field. But the bulk of the fund will be administered by SOAS to provide
    grants to scholars throughout the world to document and analyse endangered
    languages.

    Professor Colin Bundy, Director and Principal of SOAS, voiced unqualified
    delight at the news of the award. "SOAS was founded in 1916 as a specialist
    institution for the study of languages in Asia, and later in Africa. We
    created the first British linguistics department (in 1932) and our Library
    was identified in 1961 as a national resource for the study of Africa and
    Asia. Our history, mission and ethos equip us for this visionary project."
    He stressed that in addition to the School's regionally defined departments
    concentrating on language and culture its range of disciplinary
    departments – such as anthropology, history, linguistics – offered a rich
    opportunity for becoming a world leader in the documentation and study of
    endangered languages.

    SOAS and the Fund together will underwrite the infrastructure to manage this
    grants programs. This means that other families, foundations and companies
    that would like to donate to this cause, will have the security of knowing
    that 100% of their money goes directly to the recording and study of nearly
    extinct languages. The costs of research and documentation to ensure that
    full knowledge of a language and its use are preserved will vary, but the
    average is about £150,000: we urge all readers of this to give generously to
    this profoundly important cause--before those thousands of the world's
    languages (well over 50% of the total) that are now highly threatened,
    disappear forever. No sum is too small, and all money donated will go
    directly, fully, and only to the cause of recording near-extinct
    languages--and thus save a unique world heritage.

    www.eldp.soas.ac.uk

    Direct payments to SOAS can be made direct to the School’s bank at:

    National Westminster Bank plc
    94 Moorgate
    London EC2M 6XT
    Sort Code: 56-00-23 Account No: 08622655

    All general enquiries should be addressed to Mary O’Shea at SOAS on 07898
    4075 or mo2@soas.ac.uk



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