1. Anne-Laure Dotte is a linguist and dedicates herself to a functional-typological description of Oceanic languages. For her Ph.D. dissertation, Le iaai aujourd'hui: Évolutions sociolinguistiques et linguistiques d'une langue kanak de Nouvelle-Calédonie (Ouvéa, Iles Loyauté) 2013, she studied the modern evolutions of Iaai (New Caledonia).
2. Stéphanie Geneix-Rabault is an ethnomusilinguist. Her research focuses on oceanic music, arts, literacy, and languages in New Caledonia. She contributes to a collaborative project (2014–2016) about languages and artistic practices in Nouméa (DGLFLF-CNEP-UNC).
3. Leslie Vandeputte is an anthropologist and sociolinguist working on language practices in multilingual contexts. Her Ph.D. dissertation, D'une fonction véhiculaire à une fonction identitaire. Trajectoire du bislama au Vanuatu 2014, analyses national identification processes in Vanuatu through the uses and representations of Bislama.