Studies in Diversity Linguistics
Chief Editor
- Martin Haspelmath (Max Planck Institute for Evolutuionary Anthropology, Leipzig)
Editorial Board
- Gregory D.S. Anderson (Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages, Oregon)
- Peter Arkadiev (University of Potsdam)
- Isabelle Bril (CNRS-LACITO, Paris)
- Sonia Cristofaro (University of Pavia)
- Christian Döhler (University of Cologne)
- Rik De Busser (National Chenchi University, Taiwan)
- Mark Dingemanse (MPI Nijmegen)
- Matthew S. Dryer (University at Buffalo)
- Alexandre François (CNRS-Lattice, Paris)
- Ekkehard König (Freie Universität Berlin)
- Maria Koptjevskaja-Tamm (Stockholm University)
- Stephen Matthews (University of Hong Kong)
- Matti Miestamo (University of Helsinki)
- Andrey Shluinsky (Humboldt University, Berlin)
- Ruth Singer (University of Melbourne)
- Aaron Sonnenschein (California State University, Los Angeles)
- Siri Tuttle (University of Alaska, Fairbanks)
- Pilar Valenzuela (Chapman University, California)
- Martine Vanhove (CNRS-LLACAN, Paris)
- Honore Watanabe (ILCAA, Tokyo)
- Fernando Zúñiga (University of Berne)
Aims and Scope
This book series publishes book-length studies on individual less-widely studied languages (primarily reference grammars), as well as works in broadly comparative typological linguistics that takes into account the world-wide diversity of human languages. Work on individual languages and broadly comparative work is of a different nature, but this book series sees the two as closely related: Comparative studies need in-depth work on individual languages from around the world to build on, and descriptive work is done best in a comparative perspective.
As of March 2021, Studies in Diversity Linguistics is split into Comprehensive Grammar Library andResearch on Comparative Grammar. The original series does not accept any submissions anymore.
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ISSNs
All Books

Language change for the worse

Getting others to do things: A pragmatic typology of recruitments

Evidentiality, egophoricity and engagement

Grammatical gender and linguistic complexity I: General issues and specific studies

Grammatical gender and linguistic complexity II: World-wide comparative studies

Definiteness across languages

Diachrony of differential argument marking

Perspectives on information structure in Austronesian languages

A typology of questions in Northeast Asia and beyond: An ecological perspective

Unity and diversity in grammaticalization scenarios

On this and other worlds: Voices from Amazonia

Dependencies in language: On the causal ontology of linguistic systems

Advances in the study of Siouan languages and linguistics
