[An-lang] ALS2020 Call for Papers
Bill Palmer
bill.palmer at newcastle.edu.au
Fri Aug 14 07:59:56 UTC 2020
Call for Papers: ALS2020 Building Bridges
Online Conference
14-15 December 2020
The 53rd annual conference of the Australian Linguistic Society will run in an exciting online format on Monday and Tuesday 14th-15th December 2020.
The theme this year is Building Bridges, in acknowledgement of the role that this Conference will play in connecting together a community of Linguistics researchers who have been living through many months of perturbation, fragmentation, and (in some cases) isolation as a result of Covid-19. We will therefore celebrate the resilience of our community through these challenging times, and create a forum for providing mutual support and solidarity as we hear about the research that our community has been progressing in spite of everything.
The conference will run as an online event, including two keynote presentations, pre-recorded video papers, live panel discussions, a public event as well as live social events and a series of NEXT GEN sessions for HDR and ECR members.
Keynote speakers:
Two keynote presentations will be delivered as part of the conference program. These will focus on how the field of linguistics can build new ways of engaging with society and its needs, including what we can do to address pressing issues of linguistic discrimination, racism and exclusion, as well as to foster an atmosphere of sustainable and supportive practice at all levels. These will be live-streamed and followed by a Q&A.
Confirmed keynote speakers:
Anne Charity-Hudley, University of California, Santa Barbara
Umberto Ansaldo, University of Sydney/Curtin University
Conference structure and scope:
Presenters will be invited to submit videos of their talk or their poster in advance of the conference to enable them to be viewed online with the opportunity to comment and ask questions. This will precede a concurrently-programmed series of live-streamed sessions on 14th-15th December during which the session chairs will curate a Q&A and discussion around the papers within each session. Materials will be password-protected and will only be available to those who register for the conference. All materials will be removed from the conference website on 31st December 2020. The conference registration fee will be held at a low level to encourage wide participation from the ALS membership and beyond.
The program will be structured around general sessions of oral presentations and posters and themed panels centred around a set of linked oral presentations. We welcome a wide range of submissions across the languages of the world, including Indigenous languages (from Australia and elsewhere), non-Indigenous global languages, migrant languages, sign languages, pidgins, creoles and mixed languages. As the Society hosts General Linguistics conferences, we invite submissions from all linguistic subfields, for 15-minute presentations in the general sessions, for posters, and for presentations within a themed panel. Abstracts that are deemed to be outside the scope of the relevant panel or workshop will be considered for inclusion in the general sessions or poster sessions. All abstracts will be double-blind peer reviewed.
Main conference themed panels:
Proposals are invited for themed panel sessions to be included within the conference program. Panels should consist of a maximum of six 15-minute papers and will be allocated a slot within the program alongside the general sessions.
Proposals should be submitted via email to <conf at als.asn.au<mailto:conf at als.asn.au>> and should consist of a title for the panel, the names affiliations of the panel Chairs, a statement (300 words max) of the significance and timeliness of the proposed panel, and an outline of the prospective contributions, including titles and 100-word summaries.
The deadline for submitting panel proposals is 31st August 2020. These will be reviewed by the ALS Program Committee with outcomes notified to proposers by 7th September.
Abstract Submissions:
All abstract submissions (for contributions to general, themed, and poster sessions) are due by 30th September 2020.
All abstracts will be anonymously reviewed by the ALS Program Committee. Notifications of acceptance will be issued by 20th October.
Each abstract must be a maximum of 1 A4 page of text including title. The abstract may also include 1 additional A4 page of examples, figures, references and other relevant content. Please prepare your abstract in Times New Roman 12 point font, with 2cm on all margins. On the additional page, references only may appear in 10 point font. Examples, figures, tables must appear in 12 point font. All abstracts should be submitted in .pdf format to facilitate the review process.
The abstract must be anonymous. It should not include any author names or affiliations. Please ensure you remove all identifying information from the document properties.
Each abstract should be submitted online via the ALS EasyChair website:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=als2020<https://als.asn.au/EEGateway?b=Z7m3DbPG7iejDhjQ3O3gSA%3d%3d&c=JiRu99l%2bkgFD02Mk7BfJDw%3d%3d>
If you do not have an EasyChair account yet, you will have to create one for the purpose of this conference. To submit an abstract, you will need to both:
1. upload your abstract as one anonymous .pdf document and
2. paste the title and main text of your abstract into a text box within EasyChair.
As part of the EasyChair online submission form, you will also be asked for author & affiliation information, title, abstract, keywords and topics, your preferred presentation type (oral or poster presentation) and which themed panel, if any, you would like to present within. We strongly encourage a poster submission if your dataset lends itself well to graphical presentation. If you are submitting to a panel or workshops, please indicate if you would like the abstract to be also considered for the general sessions, in the event that it is not accepted by panel organisers.
Abstract review criteria:
Each abstract will receive a general overall evaluation. The program committee will also consider the degree to which each abstract:
* situates the study within its research context and demonstrates a clear theoretical, methodological and/or practical contribution to the field,
* coherently articulates its topic and objectives,
* outlines the data being analysed and how it will be analysed,
* is of potential interest to an ALS audience.
Further Information:
For further information and updates please see the ALS website<https://als.asn.au/EEGateway?b=CrZ%2bbUGmm6s3TCwbq%2fEohA%3d%3d&c=JiRu99l%2bkgFD02Mk7BfJDw%3d%3d> or send an email to the 2020 ALS Conference organising committee: conf at als.asn.au<mailto:conf at als.asn.au>.
The ALS 2020 organising committee:
Gerry Docherty, Griffith University, Brisbane
Robert Mailhammer, Western Sydney University, Sydney
Celeste Rodriguez Louro, The University of Western Australia, Perth
Associate Professor Bill Palmer
University of Newcastle
Lead Investigator, OzSpace project
Landscape, language and culture in Indigenous Australia.
Vice-President, Australian Linguistics Society
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://listserv.linguistlist.org/pipermail/an-lang/attachments/20200814/ee95164a/attachment.htm>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: ALS2020 Call for Papers_final_revised.pdf
Type: application/pdf
Size: 112282 bytes
Desc: ALS2020 Call for Papers_final_revised.pdf
URL: <http://listserv.linguistlist.org/pipermail/an-lang/attachments/20200814/ee95164a/attachment.pdf>
-------------- next part --------------
_______________________________________________
An-lang mailing list
An-lang at anu.edu.au
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/an-lang
More information about the An-lang
mailing list