All finished PhD theses have been published in the LOT dissertation series and are freely downloadable from https://lotschool.nl/dissertations/
Athan Idul. A study of Palenda: How the Muna people see the world through figuration. 2023-present.
Benjamin Pehrson. A descriptive grammar of Onnele, a Torricelli Language of Northcentral New Guinea. 2021-present.
Hong-Tae Jang. A descriptive grammar of Digul-Wambon, an Awyu-Dumut Language of West Papua. 2021-present.
Nora Julmi. Reconstructing the northern Quechua expansion. 2020-present. With promotor Rik van Gijn.
Jiang Wu, Tracking Malay migration history through the geneology of vernacular Malayic varieties. 2018-2023.
Erika Just. A functional approach to differential indexing – Combining perspectives from typology and corpus linguistics. 2020-2022. Co-promotor Alena Witzlack.
Yunus Sulistyono, A history of Alorese (Austronesian). Combining linguistic and oral history. 2017-2022.
Hanna Fricke. Traces of language contact: The Flores-Lembata languages in eastern Indonesia. 2014-2019.
George Saad. Variation and change in Abui: The impact of Alor Malay on an indigenous language of Indonesia. 2014-2020.
Nurenzia Yannuar. Bòso Walikan Malangan: The structure and development of a reversed language. 2014-2019.
Arum Perwitasari. The perception of English vowels by speakers of Javanese and Sundanese. 2013-2019.
Sophie Villerius. Surinam-Javanese. Radboud Universiteit. 2013-2019.
Freddy Bosswell. The grammar of Cheke Holo. 2016–2018.
Joseph Brooks. Morphology of the Chini predicate. Dissertation committee member, UC Santa Barbara, CA, 2014-2018
Ernanda. The phrasal alternation in Kerinci dialects. Universiteit Leiden. PhD defended 2017.
Angela Kluge. A grammar of Papuan Malay. Universiteit Leiden. 2008-2014.