1. World problems
  2. Discrimination against minority languages

Discrimination against minority languages

  • Repression of ethnic languages
  • Active prejudice towards regional speech
  • Prejudicial treatment of provincial dialects

Nature

Disuse of a minority language in teaching, when this is the children's mother tongue, is discriminating against the minority language population within a nation in that it denies the cultural identity of this minority population.

Incidence

There are some 5000 minority languages worldwide all of which are in danger of extinction. Until recently, France, whose 8 distinct languages and more than a dozen dialects made it the most linguistically diverse nation of western Europe, was ironically one of the most disapproving of regional speech patterns. In an attempt to create standardized French, Parisian intellectuals and leaders shunned other French dialects, deeming them crude, unintelligible or mere dialects. By 1993, the French regional languages of Corsican, Breton, Basque and Provencal were close to becoming extinct. Out of 2.8 million people living in Brittany, an estimated 50,000 used Breton daily and only half those were able to write it in 1993.

Turkey views the campaign to win linguistic and cultural rights for the country's large Kurdish-speaking minority as treason. Greece has an intolerant attitude toward Slav, Albanian and other minority languages within its region.

Broader

Narrower

Aggravates

Aggravated by

Related

Strategy

Value

Repression
Yet to rate
Prejudice
Yet to rate
Maltreatment
Yet to rate

Reference

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #4: Quality EducationSustainable Development Goal #10: Reduced Inequality

Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(D) Detailed problems
Subject
  • Government » Municipalities
  • Language » Languages
  • Language » Linguistics
  • Medicine » Hearing, speech
  • Societal problems » Maltreatment
  • Society » Minority, indigenous groups
  • Society » Racial, ethnic groups
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    Nov 29, 2022