The 39th International Conference on Salish and Neighboring Languages will be
hosted by the Squamish Nation and will take place in North Vancouver, British
Columbia on August 11-13, 2004. Papers on all aspects of the study,
preservation, and teaching of Salish and neighboring languages are welcome.
This year's conference is being coordinated with the first-ever Wakashan
Linguistics conference, to be held August 9-11 at the University of British
Columbia. Both conferences will share August 11th in North Vancouver for a day
of talks on language revitalization & pedagogy.
Papers for the ICSNL should be submitted by Friday, May 28, 2004, and will be
printed and distributed prior to the conference by the University of British
Columbia Working Papers in Linguistics, as was done last year. There are no page
limits. Electronic submissions are encouraged. Word files with any special fonts
will be accepted; however, PDF files are preferred. A style sheet is available
at http://www.linguistics.ubc.ca/UBCWPL/.
Contact the editors at Linguistics-UBCWPL@arts.ubc.ca
for updated information.
Papers should be submitted to:
The editors, ICSNL 39, 2004
UBCWPL
c/o Department of Linguistics, UBC
E-270 1866 Main Mall
Vancouver, B.C. V6T 1Z1
Canada.
The 38th International
Conference on Salish and Neighboring Languages was hosted by the Upper
St¹át¹imc Language, Culture and Education Society
August 13-15, 2003
and took
place in Lillooet, British Columbia on August 13-15.
For copies of the preprints contact:
The editors
ICSNL 38, 2003
UBCWPL
c/o Department of Linguistics, UBC
E-270 1866 Main Mall
Vancouver, B.C. V6T 1Z1
Canada
For inquiries about the conferenc, contact Marline John of USLCES at <marline_john@yahoo.com>.
The 37th International Conference on Salish and Neighboring Languages will be August 14, 15, 16, 2002 hosted by Western Washington University and Northwest Indian College and will take place at the Western Washington University campus in Bellingham, Washington Papers on all aspects of the study, preservation, and teaching of Salish and neighboring languages are welcome. The conference will be coordinated by Kristin Denham (kristin.denham@wwu.edu) and Mercedes Hinkson (mhinkson@nwic.edu) . Preprints will be by the University of British Columbia Working Papers in Linguistics, as was done last year.
The 36th International
Conference on Salish and Neighbouring Languages was held August 8-10, 2001 in
Chilliwack, British Columbia, hosted by the Stolo: Nation. Preprints were issued by
the UBC Working Papers in Linguistics as Volume 6, July 2001. Enquiries regarding
preprints should still be addressed to Linguistics-UBCWPL@arts.ubs.ca.
The 35th International Conference on Salish and Neighbouring Languages was hosted by the Mount Currie Cultural Center, Mount Currie, B.C., in conjunction with the UBC Department of Linguistics. The conference took place at Xitólacw Community School, Mount Currie on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday August 16, 17, and 18, 2000. Martina Pieree and Henry Davis coordinated the conference.
Preprints of the conference papers (including all except two late papers) were
published by UBC Working Papers on Linguistics. For price and availability
contact: Sun-Young Oh (sunyoh@interchange.ubc.ca)
or UBCWPL c/o Department of Linguistics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver,
B.C. V6T 1Z1.
The 34th International Conference on Salish and Neighbouring Languageswas hosted by Simon Fraser University and the Secwepemc Cultural Educational Society of the Shuswap People. The conference was held at the Chief Louis Center in Kamloops, B.C., August 18, 19, and 20, 1999 .
Marianne Ignace and Mercedes
Hinkson coordinated the conference.
The 33rd
International Conference on Salish and Neighboring Languages was held in August
1998 on the Univerisity of Washington campus in Seattle. The conference was
organized by Dawn Bates, Arizona State
University, Vi Hilbert, Lushootseed Research, and William Seaburg, University of
Washington, Bothell Campus.
The 32nd International Conference
on Salish and Neighboring Languages was held August 7-9, 1997. The conference was
cosponsored by the Elwha Klallam Tribe and Peninsula
College and coordinated by Timothy Montler of the
University of North Texas and Jamie Valadez of the Elwha Klallam Tribe. Sessions met on
the campus of Peninsula College in Port Angeles on
the north coast of Washington's Olympic
Peninsula.
The conference this year departed somewhat from custom in having two sets of parallel
sessions: one descriptive/theoretical and one applied. The descriptive/theoretical
sessions consisted of the customary discussion of the papers on descriptive and
theoretical linguistic topics. The applied sessions consisted of presentations and
workshops on issues in the learning, teaching, and revitalization of the native languages
of the northwest. There were over 100 participants and more than 30 presenters in the two
sessions. Contributors to the descriptive/theoretical sessions
submitted their manuscripts for inclusion in the collected papers for the conference.