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THE CENTRE FOR THEORIES OF LANGUAGE AND LEARNING UNIVERSITY OF BRISTOL DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY announces a seminar on THE CONSERVATION OF ENDANGERED LANGUAGES Friday April 21st 1995 at 9 Woodland Rd, Bristol BS8 1TB, England According to reliable estimates, half of the world's six thousand languages will become extinct in the next century. Furthermore, two thousand of the remaining three thousand languages will be threatened during the century after next. In the UK these startling facts have recently received media attention, stimulated partly by the publication this year of the Atlas of the World's Languages, edited by Christopher Moseley and R.E.Asher (Routledge). The rapid decline is largely due to a mixture of economic and political pressures affecting communities that speak minority languages, pressures which remove the new generation's motivation for communicating in their traditional language. The problem of language-extinction raises fundamental questions. What is the value of these threatened languages to science and to humankind in general? What principles might justify us in striving to keep small languages alive? What reasons are there for preserving them in archive form? The seminar is aimed primarily at academics from such disciplines as philosophy, ethics, anthropology, linguistics, sociolinguistics, cultural history, ecology and population biology, but is open to all interested persons. Seminar Programme Registration Desk opens 9.30a.m. 10-11am Mapping the Future of the World's Languages Mr.Christopher Moseley, Co-editor of Atlas of the World's Languages 1994 11-12 Should Linguistic Diversity be Preserved? Dr. Mark Pagel, Dept of Zoology, Oxford University 12-1 Who Wants to Learn a Native Language in Latin America? Prof. Marcelo Dascal, Inst.of Advanced Studies, Hebrew University of Jerusalem 1-2 Lunch 2-3 Thinking Twice: Issues in Welsh as a Second Language in Children Under 5 Ms. Sian Wyn Siencyn, Language Consultant, Author of The Sound of Europe 3-4 Orchestrating Language Revival Mr. Allan Wynne Jones, European Bureau for Lesser Used Languages 4-6 Round Table and Discussion with contributions from the floor ******************************************************* Seminar Registration Form I should like to register for the one day seminar at Bristol University and enclose my cheque for the amount stated below. SIGNATURE: NAME (Capitals): ADDRESS AND TELEPHONE: E-MAIL: ACCOMODATION WANTED? A limited amount of single Bed and Breakfast accomodation can be provided near to the seminar venue, at a cost of 22 UK pounds per night (standard room) or 36 UK pounds (en suite room). B&B night of Thursday 20th April: ___________ B&B night of Friday 21st April: ___________ Total (accomodation): ___________ Registration Fee: 5 UK Pounds Total: ___________ Please send this form and cheque payable to 'The University of Bristol' to: CTLL, Graduate Studies Centre, 7 Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1TB UK. For further information, contact the seminar organisers Dan Brickley and Andrew Woodfield (email: centre-tllMail to author|Respond to list|Read more issues|LINGUIST home page|Top of issuebristol.ac.uk) A background article on the topic is also available by email or by accessing the CTLL World Wide Web pages using the following Internet URL: http://www.bris.ac.uk/Depts/Philosophy/CTLL/index.html