The International Pragmatics Association (IPrA) is a scientific organization that focuses on the study of language use. It was established as a non-profit organization in 1986.[1]
IPrA represents the interdisciplinary field of pragmatics, offering a functional perspective on language and communication from cognitive, social, and cultural viewpoints.
In 1986, IPrA was established as a not-for-profit organization in Antwerp, Belgium.[5] The idea on which its establishment was based dates back to 1979 when Herman Parret enlisted Marina Sbisà and Verschueren to co-organize a conference on "Possibilities and limitations of pragmatics" in Urbino, Italy.[6] Another key event was the 1984 workshop "Between semantics and pragmatics," co-organized by Johan van der Auwera and Svenka Savić in Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia, which laid the foundation for the 1985 "International Pragmatics Conference" in Viareggio, Italy, co-organized by Marcella Bertuccelli Papi and Verschueren.[7] The success of this conference confirmed the belief that pragmatics provided a mobilizing idea for collaborative and trans-disciplinary research relevant for addressing problems of human communication, forming the basis for the association's establishment. In the same year, the Consultation Board was formed, and John Gumperz agreed to act as IPrA's first President. In early 1986, the Association was officially set up with its seat in Antwerp, Belgium.[8]
Presidents
1986–1990: John Gumperz (University of California, Berkeley, Anthropology)
1991–1994: Sandra Thompson (University of California, Santa Barbara, Linguistics)
1995–1999: Ferenc Kiefer (Linguistic Institute, Hungarian Academy of Sciences)
2000–2005: Susan Ervin-Tripp (University of California, Berkeley, Psychology)
2006–2011: Sachiko Ide (University of Tokyo, Linguistics)
2012–2017: Jan-Ola Östman (University of Helsinki, Linguistics)
9-14 June 2019: Hong Kong, China [on pragmatics of the margins][23]
27 June – 2 July 2021: Winterthur, Switzerland [on the pragmatics of inclusion][24]
9-14 July 2023: Brussels, Belgium [on the shape of interaction: the pragmatics of (a)typicality][25]
Its educational and outreach efforts consist of a mentoring program designed for young scholars, introductory pragmatics courses offered in different languages, and an archive featuring pioneers and leading voices in the field of pragmatics.[26]