Linguistic Diversity Index: A Scientometric Measure to Enhance the Relevance of Small and Minority Group Languages
Author(s) -
Václav Linkov,
Kieran C. O’Doherty,
Eun-Soo Choi,
Gyuseog Han
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
sage open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.357
H-Index - 32
ISSN - 2158-2440
DOI - 10.1177/21582440211009191
Subject(s) - indigenous , diversity (politics) , linguistics , mainstream , index (typography) , ethnic group , cultural diversity , sociology , linguistic diversity , relevance (law) , social science , psychology , computer science , anthropology , political science , ecology , philosophy , world wide web , law , biology
Current scientometric indexes do not encourage the linguistic diversity of sources cited in academic texts and researchers are not motivated to cite texts written in smaller languages. This diminishes the cultural diversity of the sources cited and limits the representation of small and indigenous cultures. This text proposes a scientometric measure designed to encourage the linguistic diversity of sources cited in articles, books, and papers. The Linguistic Diversity Index is based on two stipulations: (a) the more linguistically diverse the sources, the higher the score, and (b) the rarer the languages cited, the higher the score. If such a metric were used for the evaluation of social science and humanities journals, it would encourage the publication of papers that cite ideas from rarely represented cultural groups such as indigenous nations, ethnic groups from small countries, and other linguistic groups that have been omitted from mainstream scientific discourse. This might help to produce new research, which would help to improve the situation for these groups and create an epistemology that is more just to small cultural groups.
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