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Studies in Diversity Linguistics
Chief Editor
- Martin Haspelmath (Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Jena
Editorial Board
- Gregory D.S. Anderson (Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages, Oregon)
- Peter Arkadiev (Institute of Slavic Studies RAS, Moscow)
- 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 (Institute of Linguistics RAS, Moscow)
- 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 and Research on Comparative Grammar. The original series does not accept any submissions anymore.
ISSN
Studies in Diversity Linguistics has the ISSN 2363-5568.