Bilingual Education In Latin America

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Over 30 million indigenous people live in Latin America today, representing more than 400 distinct ethnolinguistic groups (Hamel, “Indigenous Education” 271). Yet, despite the large amount of activism by indigenous groups and the proliferation of international instruments protecting indigenous rights in recent decades, the development of bilingual education systems and indigenous language rights has largely varied between Latin American countries. This inconsistency can be seen through the case studies of: Bolivia and Guatemala, in which indigenous populations are the numerical majority; Ecuador and Mexico, in which significant indigenous populations exist and have noteworthy social and political weight; and Paraguay where a robust bilingual education program has been developed despite indigenous populations accounting for a small percentage of the overall population and having limited social and political weight (Hamel, “Indigenous Education” 273). …show more content…

Thus, bilingual education serves as the intersection between cultural rights and the right to self-determination, the two overarching themes of the indigenous rights movement (Hamel, “Indigenous Education” 277). To many activists, bilingual education acts as a vehicle for the attainment and protection of other indigenous rights because it creates not only national tolerance and respect for indigenous peoples, but also serves as a training ground for the future generation of indigenous activists (Hamel, “Indigenous Education”

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