The United Nations has declared 2019 as the International Year of Indigenous Languages. In recognition of this, Language is encouraging submissions dealing with research on any aspect of Indigenous languages. Papers on Indigenous languages have contributed to linguistics in significant ways. Just a few of the many influential Language articles that rely on data from Indigenous languages: Leonard Bloomfield, On sound change in Central Algonquian (1925); Marianne Mithun, On the nature of noun incorporation (1986); Anthony Woodbury, Meaningful phonological processes: A consideration of Central Alaskan Eskimo prosody (1987); Larry Hyman and Francis Katamba, A new approach to tone in Luganda (1993); Alice Harris, Where in the word is the Udi clitic? (2000); Nicholas Evans, Dunstan Brown, and Greville Corbett, The semantics of gender in Mayali: Partially parallel systems and formal implementation (2002); Rachel Nordlinger and Louisa Sadler, Nominal tense in cross-linguistic perspective (2004); Joe Blythe, Preference organization driving structuration: Evidence from Australian Aboriginal Interaction for pragmatically motivated grammaticalization (2013); Judith Tonhauser, David Beaver, Craige Roberts, and Mandy Simons, Toward a taxonomy of projective content (2103); and Laura McPherson and Kevin Ryan, Tone-tune association in Tommo So (Dogon) folk songs (2018).
SAIL / AILDI 2019
CFP: SSILA Summer 2019 Meeting
The Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of the Americas (SSILA) will hold a summer meeting at the LSA 2019 Linguistic Institute, which will take place at the University of California, Davis. The meeting will be held on July 13 and July 14 at the UC Davis Conference Center. SSILA meetings allow scholars to present on a wide range of topics centered on any aspect of Indigenous American languages.
In Memoriam: Wallace (Wally) Chafe
It is with great sadness that the Department of Linguistics at the University of California, Santa Barbara, announces the passing of our dear friend and colleague Professor Wallace (Wally) Chafe, at the age of 91, on February 3, 2019. An exceptionally deep-thinking and broad-ranging scholar, Professor Chafe produced over 230 books, articles, and other publications on semantics, discourse, prosody, cognition, and Native American languages which have been foundational to functional and usage-based approaches to linguistics.
2019 Best Student Presentation Award
SSILA 2019 Program
The program for the Winter 2019 Meeting of SSILA is now available at the SSILA website!
SSILA 2019 is being held currently with the Linguistic Society of America Annual Meeting in the Sheraton New York Times Square Hotel, New York City, from January 3–6.
Click here to see the latest version of the SSILA 2019 program.
The above link will continue to be updated as changes to the program are made.
CFP: 22nd Workshop on American Indigenous Languages (WAIL)
LSA offers fee waiver to Indigenous scholars for 2019–2020 meetings
The LSA is pleased to announce that members of Indigenous communities, including linguists and language activists, will be granted a fee waiver for its 2019 and 2020 Annual Meetings, in recognition of the International Year of Indigenous Languages 2019, as declared by UNESCO. Those who qualify for the waiver will meet UNESCO’s definition of an Indigenous person.*
CFP: Community-based language research across the Americas
CBLRAA 2019 is a workshop organized in conjunction with the annual meeting of the Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of the Americas (SSILA). The goal of the workshop is to promote and proliferate strategies for documenting and revitalizing American indigenous languages by finding ways to improve communication among community members, researchers, and institutions who engage in community-based language work. At the workshop we will discuss differences and similarities among the community-based approaches being applied, ethical and practical issues that arise, what we can learn from one another, and how we can maintain channels of communication and collaboration in the future.
Terrence Kaufman Collections at AILLA
The Archive of the Indigenous Languages of Latin America (AILLA), a digital repository at the University of Texas at Austin, is pleased to announced the opening of the Terrence Kaufman Collections.
Call for Papers: 50th Algonquian Conference / Le 50e Congrès des Algonquinistes
Deadline: September 05, 2018
(La version française apparaît ci-dessous.)
The 50th Algonquian Conference will be held in Edmonton at the University of Alberta, from Thursday, October 25 to Sunday October 28, 2018.
Visit the conference page here.
The conference is co-organized by the University of Alberta, the University of Lethbridge, the First Nations University of Canada, and the Maskwacîs Education and Schools Commission.
This conference is an international meeting for indigenous and non-indigenous scholars and community members to share research relating to Algonquian peoples, the largest First Peoples group in Canada. Fields of interest include anthropology, archaeology, art, biography, education, ethnography, ethnobotany, folklore, geography, history, language education, linguistics, literature, music, indigenous studies, political science, psychology, religion and sociology.
The Conference will open on the evening of Thursday, October 25 with a welcome reception. Regular conference sessions will take place from Friday morning to Sunday noon.
If you are interested in making a presentation, please send a title and abstract of maximum 300 words to the following address: alg50@ualberta.ca.
The subject line of your e-mail must read “Algonquian Conference” and the text of your e-mail message must include your name, postal address, institutional and/ or tribal affiliation and telephone number as well as the e-mail address of each speaker.
Please indicate your requirements for audio-visual equipment. The deadline for submission of abstracts is September 5, 2018.
Le 50e Congrès annuel des Algonquinistes aura lieu à l’Université de l’Alberta du jeudi 25 octobre au dimanche 28e octobre 2010.
Le congrès est co-organisé par l’Université de l’Alberta, l’Université de Lethbridge, First Nations University of Canada et Maskwacîs Education and Schools Commission.
Ce congrès réunit les chercheurs et chercheuses autochtones et non-autochtones de plusieurs pays et de divers horizons disciplinaires qui s’intéressent aux populations algonquiennes, lesquelles constituent le groupe autochtone le plus nombreux au Canada. Les domaines comprennent l’anthropologie, l’archéologie, les arts, l’éducation, l’ethnographie, l’ethnobotanique, le folklore, la géographie, l’histoire, les langues et l’éducation, la linguistique, la littérature, la musique, les études autochtones, les sciences politiques, la psychologie, la religion et la sociologie.
Le Congrès débutera le jeudi 25 octobre en soirée avec un cocktail de bienvenue. Les communications commenceront le vendredi dans la matinée et se poursuivront jusqu’au dimanche midi.
Les personnes qui souhaitent faire une présentation sont priées d’envoyer un titre et un résumé d’au plus une page à l’adresse suivante: alg50@ualberta.ca.
L’en-tête de votre message courriel doit porter la mention CONGRÈS DES ALGONQUINISTES. Le texte de votre message doit inclure toutes vos coordonnées: nom, institution ou affiliation tribale, ainsi que les adresses électroniques de tous les coprésentateurs.
N’oubliez pas de nous faire part de vos besoins en termes d’appareils audio-visuels et électroniques. La date limite de soumission des résumés est le 5 septembre 2018.
Call for Papers: The phonetic structures of Indigenous languages of South America
The 19th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences (ICPhS 19) will take place in Melbourne, Australia on 5-9 August 2019, with “Endangered Languages” as one of the themes of the conference. We are delighted to announce that there will be a special session at the Congress devoted to the phonetic structures of Indigenous languages of South America. We are now inviting full paper submissions on original, unpublished research relating to the phonetics of any Indigenous South American language. The special session will be a poster session, but all successful submissions will be immediately published as part of the prestigious ICPhS proceedings.
This special session is a venue for researchers to present the most up-to-date phonetic research on endangered South American Indigenous languages. In particular, the session focuses on how researching phonetic structures in native South American languages can inform and enrich phonetic typology as a whole. Furthermore, this session offers a possibility for field phoneticians working on endangered languages to exchange methodological insights given that mainstream practices for collecting phonetic data may not be possible in the small remote communities where many endangered languages are spoken.
Authors are requested to first send an e-mail to the organisers of the special session (m.kohlberger@hum.leidenuniv.nl; lorena.orjuela@utexas.edu), indicating their intention to submit. In order to formally submit a paper, authors must go through the general submission process for ICPhS 19 (https://www.icphs2019.org/call-for-papers/). Upon submission, authors will have to indicate that they wish to take part in the special session “The phonetic structures of Indigenous languages of South America”. All submissions will go through a double-blind review process. The deadline for submission is 4 December 2018, and authors will be notified of decisions regarding acceptance by 15 February 2019.
Submissions need to conform to a strict format. Papers can only be a maximum of four A4 pages long, with an additional page for reference. Further details about format, including Word and LaTeX templates, can be found on the ICPhS 19 website (https://www.icphs2019.org/call-for-papers/).
Students and early career researchers can apply for awards towards travel costs through ASSTA (http://www.assta.org/?q=assta-conference-travel-awards-0) or IPA (https://www.internationalphoneticassociation.org/content/grants).
For any questions or clarifications, please contact the session organisers, Martin Kohlberger (m.kohlberger@hum.leidenuniv.nl) or Lorena Orjuela Salinas (lorena.orjuela@utexas.edu).
The nomination deadline for SSILA's Archiving Award has been extended to October 15
Nominations for SSILA's Archiving Award are due October 15! This award highlights the importance of creating long-term archival materials that are accessible to all communities concerned, including heritage and language communities as well as scholarly communities. It is meant to encourage others in academia to value such work as more comparable to analytic research.
Read more about the Archiving Award and the nomination guidelines here.
Post-hearing testimony on Native language revitalization
Below is a message from Jorge Emilio Rosés Labrada and Michal Temkin Martinez, co-chairs of the LSA Committee on Endangered Languages & Their Preservation (CELP).
We wanted to take this opportunity to thank those of you who were able to provide testimony ahead of the senate oversight hearing on "Examining efforts to maintain and revitalize Native languages for future generations" this past Wednesday. For those who are still interested in doing so, the post-hearing testimony submission period ends on Tuesday, September 4th. You may submit your testimony by email to testimony@indian.senate.gov.
You can download the hearing summary here, and the testimonies of the five panelists who addressed the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs (Jeannie Hovland, Jessie Little Doe Baird, Namaka Rowlins, Christine Sims and Lauren Hummingbird) here. There is also a detailed write-up of the hearing, along with recordings of the testimonies here. The LSA was approached to contribute to this hearing through the JNCL-NCLIS. For more information about the kind of work that the Joint National Committee for Languages and the National Council for Languages and International Studies (JNCL-NCLIS) does, please visit https://languagepolicy.org/.
Thank you for your help with this,
Jorge & Michal
CELP Co-Chairs
Final Call for Session Proposals: 6th International Conference on Language Documentation & Conservation (ICLDC)

6th International Conference on Language Documentation & Conservation: Connecting Communities, Language, & Technology
February 28 – March 3, 2019
Hawai'i Imin International Conference Center
Honolulu, Hawai'i USA
http://icldc6.icldc-hawaii.org/
Final Call for Proposals: Papers, Posters, & Technology Showcase
Proposal Deadline: August 31, 2018
While we especially welcome abstracts that address the conference theme, Connecting Communities, Languages & Technology, we also welcome abstracts on other subjects in language documentation and conservation, which may include but are not limited to:
- Connecting communities, languages & technology
- Archiving matters
- Assessing success in documentation and revitalization strategies
- Community experiences of revitalization
- Data management
- Ethical issues
- Language planning
- Lexicography and grammar design
- Methods of assessing ethnolinguistic vitality
- Orthography design
- Teaching/learning small languages
- Topics in areal language documentation
- Training in documentation methods – beyond the university
Presentation Formats
- Papers will be allowed 20 minutes for presentation with 10 minutes of question time.
- Posters will be on display throughout the day of presentation. Poster presentations will run during the lunch period. Poster presentations are recommended for authors who wish to present smaller, more specific topics or descriptions of particular projects.
- Technology Showcase is a new feature to be introduced at ICLDC 2019 is the Technology Showcase, which is a networking event for developers, linguists, and community members involved in creating, repurposing, or otherwise utilizing a wide variety of technologies for language work to interact in an informal, hands-on session. The Technology Showcase will provide an opportunity for face-to-face contact and hopefully lead to productive collaborations—both between developers and communities, and also between developers and between communities who might not be aware of others working on similar efforts. We are soliciting developers (broadly defined) to submit proposals that outline the tool that they have developed, which include but are not limited to software, apps, web technologies, repurposed uses of software, novel scripts.
For more information including abstract guidelines, online submission form and scholarship opportunities, please see the conference website.
