Linguistic diversity index

World map of linguistic diversity index (linearly proportional to the shading intensity). Data is from the 18th edition of Ethnologue: Languages of the World.

Linguistic diversity index (LDI) may refer to either Greenberg’s (language) Diversity Index[1] or the related Index of Linguistic Diversity (ILD) from Terralingua, which measures changes in the underlying LDI over time.[2]

Greenberg's Diversity Index (LDI) is the probability that two people selected from the population at random will have different mother tongues; it therefore ranges from 0 (everyone has the same mother tongue) to 1 (no two people have the same mother tongue).[3] The ILD measures how the LDI has changed over time; a global ILD of 0.8 indicates a 20% loss of diversity since 1970, but ratios above 1 are possible, and have appeared in regional indexes.[4]

The computation of the diversity index is based on the population of each language as a proportion of the total population. The index cannot fully account for the vitality of languages. Also, the distinction between a language and a dialect is fluid and often political. A great number of languages are considered to be dialects of another language by some experts and separate languages by others. The index does not consider how different the languages are from each other, nor does it account for second language usage; it considers only the total number of distinct languages, and their relative frequency as mother tongues.[5]

Rankings by country

According to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (as of 2009) the LDI rankings for the following countries are:[6]

Rank Country LDI
1 Papua New Guinea.990
2 Vanuatu.972
3 Solomon Islands.965
4 Tanzania.965
5 Central African Republic.960
6 Chad.950
7 Democratic Republic of the Congo.948
8 Cameroon.942
9 India.930
10 Mozambique.929
11 Uganda.928
12 Gabon.919
13 Côte d'Ivoire.917
14 Liberia.912
15 Angola.901
16 Kenya.901
17 Togo.897
18 Timor-Leste.897
19 Mali.876
20 Nigeria.870
21 South Africa.869
22 Zambia.855
23 Guinea-Bissau.853
24 Philippines.849
25 Bhutan.846
26 Indonesia.846
27 Ethiopia.843
28 Republic of the Congo.820
29 Sierra Leone.817
30 Namibia.808
31 Ghana.805
32 Iran.797
33 Micronesia.792
34 Suriname.788
35 Benin.785
36 United Arab Emirates.777
37 Burkina Faso.773
38 Senegal.772
39 Pakistan.762
40 Malaysia.758
41 Thailand.753
42 Eritrea.749
43 Gambia.748
44 Guinea.748
45 Singapore.748
46   Nepal.742
47 Belgium.734
48 Afghanistan.732
49 Kazakhstan.701
50 Trinidad and Tobago.696
51 Belize.693
52 Oman.693
53 Guatemala.691
54 Bolivia.680
55 Laos.678
56 Kyrgyzstan.670
57 Jordan.666
58 Israel.665
59 Bahrain.663
60 Norway.657
61 Madagascar.656
62 Niger.646
63 Mauritius.641
64 Saudi Arabia.609
65 Qatar.608
66 Fiji.607
67 Nauru.596
68 Latvia.595
69 Italy.593
70 Djibouti.592
71 Moldova.589
72 Sudan.587
73 Yemen.579
74 Georgia.576
75 Andorra.574
76 Macedonia.566
77 Kuwait.556
78 Comoros.551
79 Canada.549
80  Switzerland.547
81 Cayman Islands.547
82 Austria.540
83 Zimbabwe.526
84 Monaco.521
85 Myanmar.521
86 Malawi.519
87 Egypt.509
88 Syria.503
89 Luxembourg.498
90 Gibraltar.498
91 San Marino.494
92 Ukraine.492
93 China.491
94 Iraq.484
95 Tajikistan.482
96 Estonia.476
97 Morocco.466
98 Brunei.456
99 Equatorial Guinea.453
100 Botswana.444
101 Spain.438
102 Uzbekistan.428
103 Bosnia and Herzegovina.416
104 Belarus.397
105 Netherlands.389
106 Sao Tome and Principe.389
107 Aruba.387
108 Bahamas.386
109 Turkmenistan.386
110 Cook Islands.379
111 Peru.376
112 Azerbaijan.373
113 Cyprus.366
114 Libya.362
115 Serbia.359
116 United States.353
117 Paraguay.347
118 Lithuania.339
119 Bangladesh.332
120 Mongolia.331
121 Panama.324
122 Dominica.313
123 Algeria.313
124 Sri Lanka.313
125 Slovakia.307
126 Turkey.289
127 Russia.283
128 France[note 1].272
129 Netherlands Antilles.266
130 Ecuador.264
131 Lesotho.260
132 Albania.257
133 Vietnam.234
134 Swaziland.228
135 Bulgaria.224
136 Ireland.223
137 Argentina.213
138 Palestine.208
139 Germany.189
140 Somalia.179
141 Greece.175
142 Slovenia.174
143 Armenia.174
144 Mauritania.172
145 Romania.168
146 Sweden.167
147 British Virgin Islands.167
148 Lebanon.161
149 Hungary.158
150 Cambodia.157
151 Turks and Caicos Islands.145
152 Anguilla.140
153 Finland.140
154 Tuvalu.139
155 United Kingdom.139
156 Mexico.135
157 Liechtenstein.128
158 Australia.126
159 New Zealand.102
160 Uruguay.092
161 Barbados.091
162 Croatia.087
163 Nicaragua.081
164 Guyana.078
165 Palau.077
166 Niue.071
167 Cape Verde.070
168 Czech Republic.069
169 Seychelles.067
170 Grenada.064
171 Poland.060
172 Antigua and Barbuda.057
173 Honduras.056
174 Tokelau.054
175 Dominican Republic.053
176 Denmark.051
177 Costa Rica.050
178 Chile.034
179 Kiribati.033
180 Brazil.032
181 Colombia.030
182 Japan.028
183 Marshall Islands.027
184 Montserrat.026
185 Venezuela.026
186 Portugal.022
187 Saint Lucia.020
188 Iceland.019
189 Malta.016
190 Tonga.014
191 Tunisia.012
192 Jamaica.011
193 Saint Kitts and Nevis.010
194 Maldives.010
195 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.009
196 El Salvador.004
197 Burundi.004
198 Rwanda.004
199 South Korea.003
200 Samoa.002
201 Cuba.001
202 Haiti.000
203 Saint HelenaNone
204  Vatican CityNone
205 MontenegroNone
206 BermudaNone
207 Hong KongNone
208 MacauNone
209 North KoreaNone

See also

Notes and References

Notes

  1. Including New Caledonia, a French Overseas Territory with a high level of Linguistic Diversity Index

References

  1. Greenberg, Joseph H. (1956). "The Measurement of Linguistic Diversity". Language. 32 (1): 109–115. JSTOR 410659. doi:10.2307/410659.
  2. Harmon, David; Loh, Jonathan (2010). "The Index of Linguistic Diversity: A New Quantitative Measure of Trends in the Status of the World’s Languages". Language Documentation and Conservation. http://nflrc.hawaii.edu/ldc. 4: 97–151. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 November 2014. External link in |publisher= (help)
  3. "Summary by country". Ethnologue. 1999-02-19. Retrieved 2013-09-05.
  4. Harmon, David; Loh, Jonathan (2010). "The Index of Linguistic Diversity: A New Quantitative Measure of Trends in the Status of the World’s Languages". Language Documentation and Conservation. http://nflrc.hawaii.edu/ldc. 4: 106–107. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 November 2014. External link in |publisher= (help)
  5. "overview of Linguistic Diversity". terralingua.org. Retrieved 2014-11-18.
  6. UNESCO World Report – Investing in Cultural Diversity and Intercultural Dialogue
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