Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space
Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space is an international journal of critical, heterodox, and interdisciplinary research into the relations between the political and the spatial. It advances debates on the spatialization of politics and the politicization of spatial relations. The journal welcomes original contributions that integrate empirical and theoretical analyses to engage, advance, challenge, and reframe debates about the political.
Visit the other journals from the Environment and Planning suite:
Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space
Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science
Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space
This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space is an international journal of critical, heterodox, and interdisciplinary research into the relations between the political and the spatial. It advances debates on the spatialization of politics and the politicization of spatial relations. The journal welcomes original contributions that integrate empirical and theoretical analyses to engage, advance, challenge, and reframe debates about the political.
Politics and Space values a wide range of critical and radical perspectives and encourages new theorizations, novel methodologies, and decentring ontologies. This is a global journal that supports and welcomes scholarship produced from and about all regions of the world. It encourages scholarship that engages marginalized and oppressed standpoints and critically engages hegemonic forms of power. The journal aims to push the boundaries and potential of research on the political and the spatial by exploring questions including: What is the status of the political in such research? How does thinking politics spatially help us understand pressing contemporary concerns in the world? And how can or should researchers act politically through their scholarship?
The editors welcome empirically-oriented contributions as well as work that is more conceptual. The substantive scope of Politics and Space extends from urban politics to the politics of international institutions; from political economies of development and empire to political geographies of mobilities and identities; from geopolitics to the governance of environmental crises; and from the spatialities of states and sovereign power to the geographies of social justice. Papers should advance knowledge on the intersection of the spatial and the political in any area of the social sciences or humanities.
Eugene McCann | Simon Fraser University, Canada |
Luiza Bialasiewicz | University of Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Thom Davies | University of Nottingham, UK |
Rachel Hughes | University of Melbourne, Australia |
Sarah Hunt | University of Victoria, Canada |
Katie Nudd | Freelance Editorial Office, UK |
Ishan Ashutosh | Indiana University, USA |
Veit Bachmann | University of Bonn, Germany |
Oliver Belcher | Durham University, UK |
Lisa Bhungalia | Kent State University, USA |
Nicholas Blomley | Simon Fraser University, Canada |
John Paul Catungal | University of British Columbia, Canada |
Mathew Coleman (Rural and remote psychiatry) | University of Western Australia, Australia |
Deirdre Conlon | University of Leeds, UK |
Elena dell'Agnese | Università degli Studi di Milano - Bicocca, Italy |
Mustafa Dikeç | Université Paris-Est, France |
Sapana Doshi | University of Arizona, USA |
Juliet Fall | Université de Genève, Switzerland |
Rogerio Haesbaert | Universidade Federal Fluminense, Brazil |
Mona Harb | American University of Beirut, Lebanon |
Patricia Lopez | Dartmouth College, USA |
Onofre Martorell Cunill | Universitat de les Illes Balears, Spain |
Fiona McConnell | University of Oxford, UK |
Beverley Mullings | Queen's University, Canada |
Amber Murrey | University of Oxford, UK |
Godwin Murunga | Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa, Senegal |
Sabelo Ndlovu-Gatsheni | University of South Africa |
Patricia Noxolo | University of Birmingham, UK |
Diana Ojeda | Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Colombia |
Raul Pacheco-Vega | Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales (FLACSO) Sede, Mexico |
Laura Pulido | University of Oregon, USA |
Adam Ramadan | University of Birmingham, UK |
Maano Ramutsindela | University of Cape Town, South Africa |
Anna Secor | University of Kentucky, USA |
Joanne Sharp | University of Glasgow, UK |
Cristina Temenos | University of Manchester, UK |
Chih Yuan Woon | National University of Singapore, Singapore |
Takashi Yamazaki | Osaka City University, Japan |
Patricia Daley | University of Oxford, UK |
Alison Mountz | Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada |
Joe Painter | Durham University, UK |
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.