Journal of West African Languages explained

Journal of West African Languages
Editor:Adams Bodomo
Discipline:Linguistics
Language:English, French
Abbreviation:J. West Afr. Lang.
Publisher:West African Linguistic Society
Frequency:Biannually
History:1964-present
Openaccess:Open access
Website:http://www.journalofwestafricanlanguages.org/
Oclc:844072
Lccn:64009419
Issn:0022-5401

The Journal of West African Languages is a peer-reviewed academic journal dedicated to the study of West African languages. It is the official publication of the West African Linguistic Society.

History

The journal was established in 1964 and up to volume 8 published by Cambridge University Press. It was subsequently taken over by the West African Linguistic Society. Editing and production were initially undertaken at the University of Ibadan, but production was later transferred to the Summer Institute of Linguistics beginning with volume 12. The Journal is in its 48th volume (as of 2021).

The journal is published in volumes of two issues per year (May and November). It is an open access journal, currently published only online.[1]

The current editor-in-chief is Prof. Dr. Adams Bodomo (Department of African Studies, University of Vienna).

Indexing and abstracting

The journal is abstracted and indexed in Abstracts in Anthropology, International Bibliography of the Social Sciences, Linguistic Bibliography, Linguistics Abstracts, Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts, MLA International Bibliography, and ErihPlus.

External links

Notes and References

  1. See JWAL's website for new and earlier editions of the journal. Web site: Journal of West African Languages.