Ethnicities
Area and Ethnic Studies (General) | Development Studies (General) | Political Geography
An ISI rated journal, Ethnicities is fully peer-reviewed with an impressive international reputation and focus. As a genuinely cross-disciplinary journal centred on sociology and politics, Ethnicities provides the very best critical, interdisciplinary dialogue on questions of ethnicity, nationalism and related issues such as identity politics and minority rights.
Ethnicities has three broad aims, each of which adds a new and distinctive dimension to the academic analysis of ethnicity, nationalism, identity politics and minority rights.
A Journal of Sociology and Politics
Ethnicities aims to achieve a critical nexus between the disciplines of sociology and politics with respect to debates on ethnicity, nationalism and identity politics.
A Journal of Culture and Structure
Ethnicities aims to explore the complex interconnections between culture and socioeconomic structure with respect to the mobilisation of ethnicity, other social movements, and the implications of such mobilisation(s) for modern nation-states.
An International Journal
Ethnicities has a truly international reach, and welcomes discussion of any country or region of the world, as well as transnational and diasporic contexts.
"Reviewing the issues published so far, one cannot help but be impressed by the high quality of most submissions and the amount of ground they cover.This journal is essential reading for those teaching and reseraching in the general area of race, ethnicity, migration, nationalism and transnational studies." Gurharpal Singh - THES
"The journal Ethnicities is most welcome, adding to the journals which already exist in the area an interdisciplinary approach that explores the relationship between the empirical and the normative and that examines issues of ethnicity and nationalism in relation to both hegemonic majorities and racialized minorities." Nira Yuval-Davis
"This is a journal whose time has come: interdisciplinary, international, engaged but skeptical, Ethnicities is sure to advance thinking in this fragmented field, every day more vital, and yet not fully liberated from the intellectual blinders inherited from the past." Roger Waldinger
"A most welcome journal in the exciting and growing field of ethnicity and race. Edited by people drawn from different disciplines, it provides a rare academic space for cross-perspectival fertilisation." Bhikhu Parekh
Ethnicities is available on SAGE Journals Online.
Submit your manuscript today at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/etn.
There is currently a burgeoning interest in both sociology and politics around questions of ethnicity, nationalism and related issues such as identity politics and minority rights. Ethnicities is a cross-disciplinary journal that will provide a critical dialogue between these debates in sociology and politics, and related disciplines.
Ethnicities has three broad aims, each of which adds a new and distinctive dimension to the academic analysis of ethnicity, nationalism, identity politics and minority rights.
A Journal of Sociology and Politics
Ethnicities aims to achieve a critical nexus between the disciplines of sociology and politics with respect to debates on ethnicity, nationalism and identity politics. These debates have until recently been largely constrained within disciplinary boundaries, resulting in the two disciplines 'talking past each other' with respect to such issues.
Consideration of the interconnections between ethnicity and other forms of identity also lends itself to an even wider interdisciplinarity. As such, the journal aims to encourage work from a wide range of related disciplines, including anthropology, black studies, cultural studies, education, gender studies, geography, history, law, literary and media studies, philosophy and social policy.
A Journal of Culture and Structure
Ethnicities aims to explore the complex interconnections between culture and socioeconomic structure with respect to the mobilisation of ethnicity, other social movements, and the implications of such mobilisation(s) for modern nation-states. In this sense, it aims specifically to bring together the more 'traditional' materialist emphases and concerns of 'race' and ethnicity studies, with the wider theoretical debates (both sociological and political) on the (re)construction of democratic societies. In so doing, it will also explore the interface between modernist and postmodernist debates on such issues.
An International Journal
Ethnicities has a truly international reach, as reflected in the composition and research expertise of the Editorial and International Advisory Boards. The journal welcomes discussion of any country or region of the world, as well as transnational and diasporic contexts. Contributors are encouraged to set their work, wherever possible, within a transnational and/or transregional perspective.
Topics Covered Include
- minorities and the nation-state
- multiculturalism
- culture, class and representation
- gender and ethnicity
- citizenship, universalism and difference
- minority rights and political representation
- hybrid and multiple identities
- racism and antiracism
- ethnicity and socioeconomic equality
- diasporic movements
- transnational networks
- indigenous movements
- language and ethnicity
- education and cultural pluralism
- colonialism and postcolonialism
- whiteness
- religious mobilisation and conflict
- regulation of ethnic conflict
- ethnonationalisms
- ethnicity, nationalism and globalisation
Professor Stephen May | University of Auckland, New Zealand |
Professor Tariq Modood | University of Bristol, UK |
Lincoln Dam | Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand |
Dr. Samuel Fury Childs Daly | The University of Chicago, USA |
Professor Peter J. Kivisto | Augustana College, USA |
Dr Norman Vasu | National University of Singapore, Singapore |
Dr Marco Antonsich | Loughborough University, UK |
Dr. Bahar Baser | Durham University, UK |
Professor Rainer Bauböck | European University Institute, Italy |
Professor Irene H. Bloemraad | University of California, Berkeley, USA |
Professor Daniele Conversi | University of Basque Country/Ikerbasque Foundation for Science, Spain |
Professor Zsuzsa Csergo | Queens University, Canada |
Dr Jan Dobbernack | Newcastle University, UK |
Dr Sender Dovchin | Curtin University, Australia |
Professor Thomas Hylland Eriksen | University of Oslo, Norway |
Professor Adrian Favell | Leeds University, UK |
Professor Jon Fox | University of Bristol, UK |
Professor Mingyue Gu | The Education University of Hong Kong, China |
Professor R Enrique Hamel | Autonoma Metropolitana, Mexico City, Mexico |
Dr Jennifer Holdaway | International Institute for Asian Studies, Netherlands |
Dr Riva Kastoryano | Science Po, France |
Professor Nabil Khattab | Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, Qatar and University of Bristol, UK |
Professor Ahmet Kuru | San Diego State University, USA |
Professor Will Kymlicka | Queen's University, Kingston, Canada |
Dr Christopher Kyriakides | York University, Canada |
Dr Geoffrey Brahm Levey | University of New South Wales, Australia |
Professor Teresa L. McCarty | University of California, Los Angeles, USA |
Professor Nasar Meer | University of Edinburgh, UK |
Professor Greg Noble | Western Sydney University, Australia |
Professor Mansor M. Noor | National University of Malaysia, Malaysia |
Professor Dominic O’Sullivan | Charles Sturt University, Australia |
Dr. Prem Phyak | Columbia University, USA |
Dr Richard Race | Sapienza University, Italy |
Dr Lomarsh Roopnarine | Jackson State University, USA |
Professor Anna Triandafyllidou | Ryerson University, Canada |
Professor Paul Tiyambe Zeleza | Howard University, USA |
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.