The Hans Rausing Endangered Languages ProjectThe Hans Rausing Endangered Languages Project   The Hans Rausing Endangered Languages Project

Visitors

HRELP warmly welcomes visitors to our project. ELAP and ELAR occupy two floors of a newly built Research Centre and we may have space available for visitors on a short- or medium-term basis. If you are interested in visiting, please contact Professor Peter Austin to discuss possible arrangements.

For academic visitors ELAP and ELAR may be able to assist with applications for travel and subsistence funds from the British Academy, the Arts and Humanities Research Board or other sources. Please contact us well before your planned visit as application deadlines for funding are normally six months or more ahead of when visits take place.

Recent visitors

1 Sep 2006–31 Aug 2007Dr Edward Garrett
Eastern Michigan University, American Council of Learned Societies Visiting Fellow ... home page
18 Dec–1 Feb 2007Prof Peter Sutton
University of Adelaide/Institute of Archeology, UCL
15 Sep–4 Oct 2006Dr Midori Osumi
Tokyo Women's Christian University
10 Feb–10 June 2006Prof David Bradley
Leverhulme Visiting Professor
1 Apr 2005–31 Mar 2006Dr Yoko Fujii
Department of English, Japan Women's University

Previous visitors

26 Apr–2 May 2005Dr Patrick McConvell
Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies
25 May 2005 Prof Larry Hyman
University of California, Berkeley
1–17 Jun 2005John Giacon
Gamilaraay-Yuwaalaraay language project, NSW, Australia
9–19 Jul 2005Josephine Caffery
Batchelor Institute of Indigenous Tertiary Education Centre for Australian Languages and Linguistics, NT, Australia
4–7 Oct 2005Susan Gehr
Director of Language Program, Karuk Tribe, California, USA
28–30 Nov 2005Prof Bernard Comrie
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig Germany
3–7 Dec 2005Dr Frank Seifart
Ruhr University, Bochum, Germany
23 Jul 2004Boyd Michailovsky
INALCO, Paris
25–30 Apr 2004Robert Ladd
Edinburgh University
28–30 Apr 2004Nikolaus Himmelmann
Bochum University, Germany
15–16 Apr 2004Loretta O’Connor
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen
9–10 Sep 2004Gillian Wigglesworth
University of Melbourne, Australia
21–22 Sep 2004Linda Barwick and Allan Marrett
University of Sydney, Australia
27–30 Sep 2004David Bradley
La Trobe University, Australia