FW: NWAV Asia-Pacific 3 Call for Papers
Adam Schembri
A.Schembri at LATROBE.EDU.AU
Tue Sep 24 23:22:49 UTC 2013
Apologies for cross-postings.
From: Miriam Meyerhoff <m.meyerhoff at AUCKLAND.AC.NZ<mailto:m.meyerhoff at AUCKLAND.AC.NZ>>
Date: Tue, 24 Sep 2013 22:49:20 +0000
To: <VAR-L at JISCMAIL.AC.UK<mailto:VAR-L at JISCMAIL.AC.UK>>
Subject: NWAV Asia-Pacific 3 Call for Papers
With apologies for any cross-posting.
New Ways of Analysing Variation Asia-Pacific 3
Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, 1-3 May 2014
FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS
We are pleased to announce the third meeting of the NWAV ASIA-PACIFIC conference series, (NWAV AP 3) will be held 1st-3th May 2014, in Wellington, New Zealand. NWAV AP 3 will be hosted by the School of Linguistics and Applied Language Studies and the Deaf Studies Research Unit of Victoria University of Wellington (Te Whare Wa?nanga o te U?poko o te Ika a Ma?ui).
Plenary speakers (confirmed):
Dr Michael Dunn (Max-Planck Institut, Nijmegen)
Dr Lisa Lim (University of Hong Kong)
Dr Adam Schembri (La Trobe University)
Online abstract submissions will open soon with a submission deadline of 15 November 2013. Please watch for a second announcement with details shortly. Reviewing of abstracts will be concluded by 15 December 2013.
About the Conference Series
NWAV ASIA-PACIFIC endeavours to bring together research that is firmly based on empirical data with an emphasis on the quantitative analysis of variation and change. Its priorities are to promote and showcase research on (1) the indigenous languages of the Asia-Pacific region, and (2) restructured or contact varieties that have emerged in the Asia-Pacific region. NWAV AP 3 particularly encourages submissions on the sign languages of Asia and the Pacific.
NWAV AP 3 welcomes submissions for papers and posters on all scientific approaches to analyzing and interpreting language variation and change across the Asia-Pacific region including: real-time/apparent-time language change, dialect variation and change, speech communities, multilingualism, urbanisation and migration, sociophonetics, style-shifting, language/dialect contact, variation in minority languages, variation in acquisition, perceptual dialectology, and other topics that enrich our understandings of the region and its indigenous languages.
At the first meeting of the conference, NWAV AP established a tradition of showcasing the innovative descriptive, philological, historical and socially informed research being conducted by emerging and established scholars in some of the world's most fertile arenas of language and dialect contact.
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