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Enoch Oladé Aboh is Professor of Linguistics at Universiteit van Amsterdam. His publications include The Morphosyntax of Complement-head Sequences (2004). In 2012 he was awarded the renowned one-year NIAS fellowship, and in 2003 he obtained the prestigious Dutch Science Foundation (NWO) five-year vidi grant to study the relation between information structure and syntax.
Foreword Salikoko S. Mufwene
1. Introduction
2. The agents of creole formation: geopolitics and cultural aspects of the Slave Coast
3. The emergence of creoles: a review of some current hypotheses
4. Competition and selection
5. The role of vulnerable interfaces in language change: the case of the D-system
6. The emergence of the clause left periphery
7. The emergence of serial verb constructions
8. Conclusions: some final remarks on hybrid grammars, the creole prototype, and language acquisition and change.