The Alliance for Linguistic Diversity[]

European Day of Languages logo, a symbol of linguistic diversity.
The Alliance for Linguistic Diversity is a multi-organizational, international body which oversees the Endangered Languages Project, which it co-founded with Google. Its Advisory Committee, along with the First Peoples' Heritage, Language, and Cultural Council, took over the Endangered Languages Project from Google in late 2012.
The Alliance for Linguistic Diversity is comprised of the following members:
- Alaska Native Language Archive (ANLA)
- Asociación Cultural Parola
- Association for Cultural Equity
- CBC Radio
- Center for American Indian Languages
- Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana
- Endangered Language Alliance
- First Peoples’ Heritage, Language, and Cultural Council
- Grassroots Indigenous Multimedia
- Indigenous Language Institute
- Laboratório de Linguas Indígenas
- Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages
- Mohawk Council of Akwesasne
- Museum of the Cherokee Indian
- National Folklore Support Centre
- PanLex (The Long Now Foundation)
- Pechanga Band of Luiseño Indians
- The Chontal Project in the DoBeS Archive
- The DoBES Project on Taa
- The Endangered Languages Catalogue team at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa
- The John Carter Brown Library at Brown University
- The Language Archive at the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
- The LINGUIST List
- The Myaamia Project
- The Rosetta Project (The Long Now Foundation)
- Transparent Language, Inc.
- UCLA Phonetics Laboratory
- University of Pennsylvania Libraries
- World Oral Literature Project
Links for the Alliance for Linguistic Diversity[]
The Alliance for Linguistic Diversity page on the Endagered Languages Project website