Laura J. Downing

Downing (born 1954, Mitchel AFB, New York) is an American linguist, specializing in the phonology of African languages.

[1] Her dissertation, The tonal phonology of Jita, was published by Lincom Europa in 1996.

After receiving her PhD, she held several positions in North America before moving to Europe in 2001.

She was a senior researcher at the ZAS (Center for General Linguistics) in Berlin from 2001 to 2012,[2] and was professor of African Languages at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, from 2012 until her retirement in 2021.

[3][4][5] Downing's research centers on the formal analysis of the prosody of Bantu languages, including prosodic morphology, lexical and grammatical tone systems, information structure and phrasal prosody.

[6] Her research has contributed to a better understanding of the prosodic and morphological constraints on reduplication, especially in Bantu languages (Downing 2006).

Her work with Lisa Cheng on the phonology-syntax interface, in particular in Zulu, shows the close interaction between the prosodic phrasings of a language and the syntactic structure within the Minimalist framework (Cheng & Downing 2009, 2016).

She co-directed, with Annie Rialland, a French-German ANR-DFG project, BANTUPSYN, devoted to the Phonology-syntax Interface in Bantu languages (2009–2012).

[9][10] This project led to a co-edited volume on Intonation in African tone languages (Downing & Rialland, eds., 2017).

[11] With Maarten Mous (Leiden University) and Morgan Nilsson (U of Gothenburg), she led a VR project investigating Somali prosody from 2016 to 2019.

ISBN 978-3-11-048479-3 Selected other publications Lisa L.-S. Cheng and Laura J.

In Helen de Hoop & Geertje van Bergen (eds.