SCONLI-16, originally scheduled on 7th-9th January 2026, has been rescheduled to 19th-21st January 2026 due to a scheduling conflict with the UGC-NET JRF exam for Linguistics on 07th January 2026.
We regret the inconvenience caused and request your understanding in this regard.
If any queries, please do not hesitate to contact us.
The 16th Students’ Conference of Linguistics in India, known as SCONLI will be held from 19th to 21st of January 2026, hosted by the School of Language Sciences, The English and Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad. The conference continues its tradition of intellectual rigor while actively embracing new methodologies and interdisciplinary approaches that display the changing face of linguistic research. From theoretical explorations to applied studies, SCONLI remains committed to enhancing comprehensive, cutting-edge scholarship. Hosted once more at EFLU Hyderabad after fifteen years, SCONLI-16 interrogates established paradigms and cultivates emerging methodologies — it is a confluence of ideas, a dialogue across generations, and an opportunity to redefine the contours of linguistic inquiry. As we prepare for SCONLI-16's return to its institutional roots at EFLU Hyderabad, we reflect on its legacy while embracing the dynamic future of linguistic research. We recognize this moment as both a homecoming and a step forward.
The persistent dichotomy between formalist conceptions of language as an autonomous cognitive system (Chomsky, 1965; Hauser et al., 2002) and functionalist approaches emphasizing its socio-interactional nature (Gumperz, 1982; Tomasello, 2003) has generated theoretical tensions that continue to shape disciplinary boundaries. This conceptual bifurcation, while historically productive, may now constrain comprehensive understandings of linguistic phenomena that inherently span both cognitive and social domains. Emerging evidence from neurolinguistics (Pulvermüller, 2018) and developmental psycholinguistics (Kuhl, 2007) demonstrates that the neural substrates of language processing are profoundly sensitive to social-contextual variables, while variationist sociolinguistics (Eckert, 2012) reveals unexpected systematicity in socially conditioned alternations. These empirical findings problematize traditional distinctions between competence and performance, suggesting instead that linguistic knowledge is constituted through dialogic interaction (Linell, 2009). The acquisition process itself appears to involve continuous feedback loops between cognitive predispositions and social-environmental inputs (Clark, 2016), rendering artificial any strict separation between "internal" linguistic system and "external" linguistic practice.
This framework challenges us to re-examine South Asian languages-with their exceptional diversity and complex sociolinguistic ecologies - as critical sites for unifying theoretical and empirical approaches. The theme "Theoretical and Empirical Approaches to South Asian Languages" seeks work that leverages the region’s multilingualism, contact phenomena, and grammatical innovations to test and refine a comprehensive theory of language that accounts for its dual nature as both a cognitive system and a social practice by recognizing that linguistic structure emerges from, and is fundamentally shaped by, recurrent patterns of interaction moving beyond the system/use divide by treating language as a complex adaptive system that is simultaneously psychologically real and socially constituted.
Abstract submission deadline:
Extended until 28 November 2025
Notification of acceptance:
10th December 2025
Online registration deadline:
Extended until 25th December 2025
Conference dates:
19th-21st January 2026
Central Institute of Indian languages, Mysuru
The English and Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad
State Bank of India