Are you looking for a PhD position in an inspiring, dynamic, and international setting?
The Amsterdam Center for Language and Communication (ACLC),
https://aclc.uva.nl/ currently has a vacant PhD position as part of the NWO-funded research project
Crossing language borders: A quest for the human language capacity in West Africa and Central America, led by principal investigator Prof. dr. E.O. Aboh (ACLC) in collaboration with dr. María Carmen Parafita Couto (U. Leiden), prof. F. Ameka (U. Leiden), and dr. Anne L. Beatty-Martínez (McGill University).
The ACLC prioritises diversity (taken in a holistic sense, e.g., ethnicity, social and/or linguistic background, gender, sexuality)
and is committed to creating an inclusive research environment. The ACLC is one of the five Research Schools within the
Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research at the University of Amsterdam (UvA).
What are you going to do?We are looking for a talented and creative junior scholar with a Master's degree (or equivalent) who is fascinated by language use in a multilingual community, and is curious about how to describe and analyse code-switching/code-mixing (CSCM) phenomena from an interdisciplinary perspective. Our project's aim is to yield an integrated approach to multilingual speech that is both descriptively and explanatorily adequate. Despite extensive research in this area, no clear explanation emerges about the regularities underlying mixed speech. While most existing studies focus on Western communities in which CSCM is socially disfavoured, this project investigates CSCM in multilingual communities, Benin (West Africa) and Belize (Central America), where multilingual discourse involving CSCM is the norm. We will use a multimethod, comparative approach, linking linguistic, cognitive and social factors to help us understand how multilinguals adapt to communicative demands of contexts where CSCM is the norm.
We expect you to conduct fieldwork in a Gbe speaking multilingual community in Porto-Novo/Cotonou (Benin). You will collect data on CSCM, transcribe and annotate them digitally, and analyse the data in scholarly articles or book chapters as part of your thesis. You will present your results in (inter)national conferences, and participate in research activities within the project team and within the ACLC at UvA as well as with collaborating groups at the University of Leiden. At the end of the four years of appointment you will submit and defend your doctoral thesis.
Tasks and responsibilities:
- Submission of a PhD thesis within the period of appointment;
- Collection of community network data;
- Stimuli creation for speech elicitation tasks;
- Collection, transcription, and annotation of naturalistic CSCM data;
- Coding and analysis of naturalistic and elicited CSCM data;
- Participating in meetings of the project research group and developing a shared database;
- Publishing co-authored and single-authored peer reviewed articles as part of the thesis;
- Presenting intermediate research results at (inter)national workshops/conferences;
- Organising knowledge dissemination and training activities;
- Teach courses at bachelor's and/or assist at master's level in the 2nd and 3rd year (0,2 FTE per year).
- Participation in the Research School and Faculty of Humanities PhD training programmes.