Language Endangerment

Today there are about 6,500 languages spoken worldwide and at least half of those will have fallen silent by the end of this century. In many areas of the world, globalisation creates economic, political and social pressures on people who in response give up their traditional ways of life, find new sources of income and move to cities. This causes speakers to cease speaking their traditional languages, and turn to other, typically more dominant languages to foster economic and social mobility for their children.


While throughout human history speakers have shifted to other languages, the speed of this development has increased dramatically over the past century. Each of these languages expresses the unique knowledge, history and worldview of their speaker communities, and each language is a specially evolved variation of the human capacity for language. Many of these disappearing languages have never been described or recorded and so the richness of human linguistic diversity is disappearing without a trace.

The Endangered Languages Documentation Programme responds to this loss by supporting researchers to document endangered languages worldwide.


Our key objectives are
• to support the documentation of as many endangered languages as possible
• to encourage fieldwork on endangered languages
• to create a repository of resources for linguistics, the social sciences, and the language communities themselves
• to make the documentary collections freely available

What we do

We support the documentation and preservation of endangered languages through granting, training and outreach activities. The collections compiled through our funding are freely accessible at the Endangered Languages Archive.

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About us

The ELDP was founded in 2002 with a donation from the Arcadia fund to SOAS University of London. In 2021 ELDP moved to the Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften. ELDP has funded over 500 language documentation projects globally so far.

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Our Grants

We provide grants world wide for the documentation of endangered languages. Individuals regardless of nationality or host institution can apply to our programme. We offer four different grant types and run one granting cycle per year opening 15th July each year.

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Projects

Our focus is the linguistic documentation of endangered languages and making the digital collections freely available online. In addition we support capacity building through training in London and in country.

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ELDP DOCUMENTATION PROJECTS

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NEWS AND EVENTS

Summer school: Language Science Meets Linguistic Diversity in Berlin, Germany

The Endangered Languages Documentation Programme (ELDP) and the Humboldt Universität zu Berlin (HU-Berlin) Institut für deutsche Sprache und Linguistik are offering an in person summer school in Linguistic Diversity and Language Science in Berlin, Germany.

The school will take place from Monday, August 31st through Friday, September 4th, 2026.
Applications open until 1 March 15th, 2026.

Learn more about the summer school and apply here.

Training series: Talleres de Documentación Comunitaria de Lenguas Mayenses de Chiapas

Rising Voices, in collaboration with the Endangered Languages Documentation Programme (ELDP), invites speakers of Mayan languages in Chiapas to participate in the training series “Talleres de Documentación Comunitaria de Lenguas Mayenses de Chiapas”.

The live sessions will take place on each Thursday from 15 January to 19 February 2026, from 10:00am to 12:00pm (Chiapas local time) via Zoom.

To learn more and to apply, please see the webpage

Talleres de Documentación Comunitaria de Lenguas Mayenses de Chiapas

Rising Voices, en colaboración con el Endangered Languages Documentation Programme (ELDP), invitan a hablantes de lenguas mayenses de Chiapas a participar en la serie de Talleres de Documentación Comunitaria de Lenguas Mayenses de Chiapas.

Las sesiones en directo tendrán lugar todos los jueves del 15 de enero al 19 de febrero de 2026, de 10:00 am a 12:00 pm (horal local de Chipas) a través de la plataforma Zoom.

Para obtener más información y presentar su solicitud, visite la página web

“Annotated audiovisual language data: data quality and data maturity” in Harmonizing Language Data by Vera Ferreira, Hanna Hedeland and Kelsey Neely

Explore different aspects of data quality and data maturity for annotated data and recommendations for audiovisual and derived formats.

Learn more and access the paper here.

Call For Papers: Language Documentation and Archiving Conference 2026

We are thrilled to announce that the next Language Documentation and Archiving conference will take place in fall 2026 in Berlin, Germany with online participation options.

Abstract submission is open now, until 1 March 2026.

For more information about the conference visit the conference website.

Submit your abstract here.