*** 2026 NARNiHS Research Incubator
*** North American Research Network in Historical Sociolinguistics
*** 8th edition
*** 07-09 May 2026 -- entirely online!

==> Abstract Submission Deadline
==> 23 March 2026, 11:59 PM (U.S. Eastern Time)
 
The 2026 NARNiHS Research Incubator is an entirely online event (**with free 
registration**). This event offers an opportunity for scholars in historical 
sociolinguistics from all over the world to participate in discussions of 
cutting-edge research without the limitations imposed by international travel. 
We encourage our fellow historical sociolinguists and scholars from related 
fields in our global scholarly community to join us online for our Research 
Incubator this spring.

Abstract submission deadline: 23 March 2026, 11:59 PM (U.S. Eastern Time)

Abstract submission online: 
https://easyabs.linguistlist.org/submit/2026_Incubator/

The North American Research Network in Historical Sociolinguistics (NARNiHS) is 
accepting abstracts for its 2026 NARNiHS Research Incubator. The 8th edition of 
this inclusive NARNiHS event seeks to provide a collaborative environment where 
presenters bring work that is in-progress, exploratory, proof-of-concept, 
prototyping. The Incubator's audience actively participates in workshopping 
these new ideas, brainstorming along with the presenters to forge scholarly 
paths and develop research solutions. We see the NARNiHS Research Incubator as 
a place for testing and pushing boundaries; developing new theories, methods, 
models, and tools in historical sociolinguistics; seeking feedback from peers; 
and engaging in productive assessment of fledgling ideas and nascent projects.

NARNiHS welcomes papers in all areas of historical sociolinguistics, which is 
understood as the application/development of sociolinguistic theories, methods, 
and models for the study of historical language variation and change over time, 
or more broadly, the study of the interaction of language and society in 
historical periods and from historical perspectives. Thus, a wide range of 
linguistic areas, subdisciplines, and methodologies easily find their place 
within the field, and we encourage submission of abstracts that reflect this 
broad scope.

Successful abstracts for this research incubator environment will demonstrate 
thorough grounding in historical sociolinguistics, scientific rigor in the 
formulation of research questions, and promise for rich discussion of ideas. 
Abstracts should be explicit about which theoretical frameworks, methodological 
protocols, and analytical strategies are being applied or critiqued. Data 
sources and examples should be sufficiently (if briefly) presented, so as to 
allow reviewers a full understanding of the scope and claims of the research. 
Please note that the connection of your research to the field of historical 
sociolinguistics should be explicitly outlined in your abstract. Abstracts 
should not exceed one page (not including examples and references, see below). 
Failure to adhere to these criteria will likely result in rejection.

We are soliciting abstracts for 25-minute presentations. Presenters will have 
the entire 25 minutes for their presentations, with discussion happening in the 
"incubation session" at the end of each panel. Presentations will be grouped 
into thematic panels of three presentations, each panel followed by an 
hour-long discussion with the audience led by specialists, creating a 
brainstorming/workshopping environment that encourages maximum exchange of 
ideas. Discussion will encompass specific feedback on the individual papers as 
well as consideration of overarching questions of theory, methods, and models 
emerging from the papers. To facilitate such discussion, authors will be 
required to submit a draft of their presentation materials for distribution to 
the panel discussants and to the other presenters a few days prior to the start 
of the conference.

Abstracts will be accepted until Monday, 23 March 2026 -- late abstracts will 
not be considered.

*** Abstract Content Requirements:
1) Abstracts should be explicit about which theoretical frameworks, 
methodological protocols, and analytical strategies are being applied or 
critiqued.
2) Data sources and examples should be sufficiently (if briefly) presented, so 
as to allow reviewers a full understanding of the scope and claims of the 
research.
3) The connection of your research to the field of historical sociolinguistics 
should be explicitly outlined.

*** Abstract Format Guidelines:
1) Abstracts must be submitted in PDF format.
2) Abstracts must fit on one standard 8.5×11 inch or A4 page, with margins no 
smaller than 1 inch / 2.5 cm and a font style and size no smaller than Times 
New Roman 12-point. All additional content (visualizations, trees, tables, 
figures, captions, examples, and references) must fit on a single (1) 
additional page. No exceptions to these requirements are allowed; abstracts 
exceeding these limits will be rejected without review.
3) Anonymize your abstract. We realize that sometimes complete anonymity is not 
attainable, but there is a difference between the nature of the research 
creating an inability to anonymize and careless non-anonymizing (in citations, 
references, file names, etc.). Be sure to anonymize your PDF file (you may do 
so in Adobe Acrobat Reader by clicking on "File", then "Properties", removing 
your name if it appears in the "Author" line of the "Description" tab, and 
re-saving the file before submission). Do not use your name when saving your 
PDF (e.g. Smith_Abstract.pdf); file names will not be automatically anonymized 
by the EasyAbs system. Rather, use non-identifying information in your file 
name (e.g. HistSoc4Lyfe.pdf). Your name should only appear in the online form 
accompanying your abstract submission. Papers that are not sufficiently 
anonymized wherever possible will be rejected without review.

*** General Conference Requirements:
1) Abstracts must be submitted electronically, using the following link:  
https://easyabs.linguistlist.org/submit/2026_Incubator/
2) Papers must be delivered as projected in the abstract or represent bona fide 
developments of the same research.
3) Authors are expected to virtually attend the conference and present their 
own papers.
4) Presentations will be delivered via Zoom. Technical details and instructions 
regarding the platform will be sent to authors in due time.

Please contact us at [email protected] with any questions.
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