In 2021 the
Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages assisted the
Cape Fear Band of Skarure and Woccon Indians to build a 'Living Dictionary' for Woccon as part of an effort to revive the language. However, this group is not
state-recognized by North Carolina or
federally recognized by the
Bureau of Indian Affairs as being descended from the
Cape Fear,
Tuscarora, or the
Waccamaw. The group's assertions of lineage have been noted by
EBSCO Information Services to be unverified by credible historians or anthropologists. The state-recognized
Waccamaw Siouan Indians of North Carolina and the
Waccamaw Indian People of South Carolina were not included in the Living Dictionary project initiated by the Living Tongues Institute during the process of assembling the revitalization dictionary. In partnership with linguists from the
University of North Carolina Wilmington, the tribe has engaged in a reclamation project using John Lawson's colonial-era word list. This stance has contributed to the tribe’s claims of exclusivity over the Woccon language and its revitalization. While some scholars, such as
John R. Swanton, have historically suggested that Woccon and Waccamaw may refer to the same people or language, this identification remains a matter of scholarly debate. The historical record is limited and contains inconsistencies in attribution, terminology, and linguistic content. As noted by linguists and researchers involved in the Waccamaw Siouan revival project, the question of whether Woccon directly represents the language of the historic Waccamaw people, as opposed to being a related language, remains academically unresolved. As such, the current revival efforts proceed under a framework that emphasizes tribal sovereignty and cultural continuity, even as the linguistic classification of the language remains inconclusive. ==References==