Abstract

Like many indigenous populations worldwide, Yucatec Maya communities are rapidly undergoing change as they become more connected with urban centers and access to formal education, wage labour, and market goods became more accessible to their inhabitants. However, little is known about how these changes affect children's language input. Here, we provide the first systematic assessment of the quantity, type, source, and language of the input received by 29 Yucatec Maya infants born six years apart in communities where increased contact with urban centres has resulted in a greater exposure to the dominant surrounding language, Spanish. Results show that infants from the second cohort received less directed input than infants in the first and, when directly addressed, most of their input was in Spanish. To investigate the mechanisms driving the observed patterns, we interviewed 126 adults from the communities. Against common assumptions, we showed that reductions in Mayan input did not simply result from speakers devaluing the Maya language. Instead, changes in input could be attributed to changes in childcare practices, as well as caregiver ethnotheories regarding the relative acquisition difficulty of each of the languages. Our study highlights the need for understanding the drivers of individual behaviour in the face of socio-demographic and economic changes as it is key for determining the fate of linguistic diversity.

Highlights

  • Like many indigenous communities throughout the world, Yucatec Maya communities in Mexico are undergoing rapid change as they integrate into dominate market economies [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]

  • We examined whether language input changed over the period of market integration––in quantity, type, and language choice (Maya, Spanish)––and whether those changes in language input were related to childcare, educational, and belief practices

  • Changing language input following market integration in a Yucatec Mayan community related to increased contact with the majority culture across cohorts––greater access to education in the majority language, wage labor, and market goods (S1 Text, S1 and S2 Tables, S1 Fig)

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Summary

Introduction

Like many indigenous communities throughout the world, Yucatec Maya communities in Mexico are undergoing rapid change as they integrate into dominate market economies [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]. We consider how these changes may affect children’s experiences, by asking whether the language addressed to children shifts during a period of ongoing market integration and why it might do so. There are several reasons to predict language input change. During market integration (and associated opportunities for wage labor, access to education and market goods), parents may shift input away from minority local languages and towards majority surrounding.

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