Sign language recognition means making sign language official in a country through laws. This helps deaf people use their language freely and get better services.
What is Sign Language Recognition?
When a country recognizes sign language, it makes special laws that say sign language is important and should be used. This means the government accepts sign language as a real language, just like spoken languages.
Why is Recognition Important?
Recognition helps deaf people in many ways:
- It gives deaf people the right to use sign language in schools, hospitals, and government offices
- It helps protect Deaf culture and community
- It makes sure deaf people can get sign language interpreters when they need them
Countries with Sign Language Recognition
Today, 78 countries in the world have made laws about sign language.
Timeline in Europe
- Sweden (1981): The first European country to officially recognize its sign language. The Swedish Parliament declared that deaf people must be bilingual in Swedish Sign Language and Swedish.
- Finland (1995): Finnish Sign Language was recognized in the constitution in August 1995.
- Lithuania (1995): On May 4, 1995, Lithuanian Sign Language was officially recognized as the native language of the deaf.
- Slovakia (1995): Slovak Sign Language was recognized by law.
- Czech Republic (1998): The Czech parliament officially recognized Czech Sign Language as the first language of Deaf people.
- And more.
Recent Recognitions in Europe
Some notable recent recognitions in Europe include:
- The Netherlands (2021): Dutch Sign Language became official
- Bulgaria (2021): Bulgarian Sign Language was recognized
- Italy (2021): Italian Sign Language (LIS) was officially recognized
Different Types of Recognition
Countries can recognize sign language in different ways:
- Constitutional recognition: the highest level, when sign language is in the country’s constitution
- Sign language law: special laws just for sign language
- Disability law: laws that include sign language as part of disability rights
What Recognition Means
When a country recognizes sign language, it creates opportunities for deaf people to access:
- Better education for deaf children in sign language
- The right to use interpreters
- Greater respect for deaf culture
- Improved access to public services
- Access to emergency services
- Information in sign language during crisis situations
The Future
More countries are starting to recognize sign languages. The World Federation of the Deaf and the European Union of the Deaf are helping countries create new laws to protect sign languages. This helps improve the lives of deaf people around the world.
Citations:
- https://wfdeaf.org/news/the-legal-recognition-of-national-sign-languages/
- https://eapc-rld.blog.gencat.cat/2023/03/16/what-legal-recognition-what-does-the-official-language-declaration-concerning-sign-language-consist-of-filipe-venade-de-sousa/
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_recognition_of_sign_languages
- https://deafhistory.eu/index.php/deaf-history/sign-language
- https://signstation.org/how-many-countries-have-sign-language-as-an-official-language/
