Introduction: Mark Baltin (New York University) and Chris Collins (Cornell University). > Part I: Derivation versus Representation. > >1. Explaining Morphosyntactic Competition: Joan Bresnan (Stanford University). >2. Economy Conditions in Syntax: Chris Collins (Cornell University). >3. Derivation and Transformation in Modern Transformational Syntax: Howard Lasnik (University of Connecticut). >4. Relativized Minimality Effects: Luigi Rizzi (Universite de Geneve). > Part II: Movement. > >5. Head Movement: Ian Roberts (University of Stuttgart). >6. Object Shift and Scrambling: Höskuldur Thráinsson (University of Iceland). >7. Wh-inSitu Languages: Akira Watanabe (University of Tokyo). >8. A-Movements: Mark Bolton (University of New York). > Part III: Argument Structure and Phrase Structure. > >9. Thematic Relations in Syntax: Jeffrey S. Gruber. >10. Predication: John Bowers (Cornell University). >11. Case: Hiroyuki Ura. >12. Phrase Structure: Naoki Fukui (University of California). >13. The Natures of Nonconfigurationality: Mark C. Baker (McGill University). >14. What VP Ellipsis Can Do, and What it Can't, but not Why: Kyle Johnson (University of Massachusetts at Amherst). > Part IV: Functional Projections. > >15. Agreement Projections: Adriana Belletti (Universita di Siena). >16. Sentential Negation: Raffaella Zanuttini (Georgetown University). >17. The DP Hypothesis: Identifying Clausal Properties in the Nominal Domain: Judy B. Bernstein (Syracuse University). >18. The Structure of DPs: Some Principles, Parameters and Problems: Giuseppe Longobardi. > Part V: Interface With Interpretation. > >19. The Syntax of Scope: Anna Szabolcsi. >20. Deconstructing Binding: Eric Reuland (Utrecht Institute of Linguistics) and Martin Everaert (Utrecht Institute of Linguistics). >21. Syntactic Reconstruction Effects: Andrew Barss (University of Arizona). > Part VI: External Evaluation of Syntax. > >22. Syntactic Change: Anthony S. Kroch (University of Pennsylvania). >23. Setting Syntactic Parameters: Janet Dean Fodor (City University of New York).