Home How to initiate an Afranaph Sister Project



At present, there is no official process for establishing an ASP relationship with Afranaph as it is currently constituted. The project proposals that were presented at the Afranaph Project Development Workshop have developed working groups of scholars interested in increasingly well-defined areas of inquiry and are in the process of developing questionnaires for field research with our native speaker linguist consultants and additional consultants they will contract with on their own. Afranaph is willing to consider any project that is compatible with our goals and practices, and that will produce data of interest to those who would use the common database. If you are interested in developing an ASP, contact Ken Safir at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
To set the ball rolling, submit a project description, including the theoretical issues that motivate you, an idea of what sorts of empirical patterns you are looking for, and an idea of what the elicitation document would have to achieve to get at the data that interests you. Given that the resources of the Afranaph Project are finite, there are some concerns any proposal for an ASP should address. For example:
  • How likely is your project to add to the data that we have in a way that might have synergy with other existing projects and/or is it an area of theoretical interest that involves a rich empirical pattern which the project will not otherwise address?
  • Can a plausible argument be made that the empirical domain your project will explore is coherent, phenomenally (an evidence pattern) or theoretically (the data applies to a well-defined question), and is likely to lead to interesting crosslinguistic comparisons (either because there is interesting variation or an interesting lack of it)?
  • Can you reasonably commit your own resources to making your project a success? We generally prefer to deal with projects that have collaborators to spread the work and responsibility, or those who have some resources at their own institutions that can help to diminish the strain on Afranaph infrastructure.
  • Is there a plausible argument to be made that your project might eventually receive support outside Afranaph to cover its expenses?
You do not have to answer the last question, but if you can answer it affirmatively it does not hurt your chances.