Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space
Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space (ISSN: 2514-8486 print, 2514-8494 online), which is available only as part of the subscription to Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space (ISSN: 2514-8486 print, 2514-8494 online), is published four times a year in March, June, September, and December by SAGE (Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, Singapore, Washington DC, and Melbourne). The combined subscription to Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space and Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space comprises twelve issues. For information about subscribing to the package please click here.
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 C: Politics and Space
Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space is an interdisciplinary journal of nature-society scholarship. International in scope, the journal welcomes theoretically robust, empirically rich research from an array of fields including political ecology, environmental justice, science and technology studies, conservation and the environmental humanities. The journal proposes to push the ways we understand the uneven, dynamic, and often unjust intersections of nature and space with particular interest in their societal, political, and economic dimensions. We accept work from across the social sciences, humanities and critical biophysical approaches, and are especially interested in research that engages feminist, anti-colonial, antiracist, queer, posthumanist, and heterodox and alternative economic approaches. Themes of particular interest include: the relationships between economic and environmental transformation; justice-based environmental movements; environmental governance; resource politics; intersections between social difference and environmental issues; the politics of environmental knowledge; and critical engagement with debates concerning the Anthropocene, 'environmental crises' and global environmental change. While our submissions seek to provide both original conceptual and empirical insights, in some cases we will accept empirically rich articles rooted in particular places and locations.
Lyla Mehta | Institute of Development Studies, UK, and Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway |
Sharlene Mollett | University of Toronto, Canada |
Krithika Srinivasan | University of Edinburgh, UK |
Emily Yeh | University of Colorado Boulder, USA |
Katie Nudd | Freelance Editorial Office, UK |
Andrew Shmuely | Freelance Editorial Office, Canada |
Teresa Armijos Burneo | University of East Anglia, UK |
Wim Carton | Lund University, Sweden |
Brad Coombes | University of Auckland, Aotearoa, New Zealand |
Andrew Curley | University of Arizona, USA |
Rohan D’Souza | Kyoto University, Japan |
Jessica Dempsey | University of British Columbia, Canada |
Jennifer Franco | Transnational Institute, Netherlands |
Silvio Funtowicz | University of Bergen, Norway |
Lesley Green | University of Cape Town, South Africa |
Deepa Joshi | International Water Management Institutes, Sri Lanka |
Miles Kenney-Lazar | National University of Singapore, Singapore |
Sarah Knuth | Durham University, UK |
Christian Kull | University of Lausanne, Switzerland |
Nikki Luke | University of Tennessee, USA |
Frank Matose | University of Cape Town, South Africa |
Priscilla McCutcheon | University of Kentucky, USA |
Laurel Mei-Singh | University of Texas, Austin, USA |
Christine Noe | University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania |
Diana Ojeda | Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Colombia |
D. Parthasarathy | Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, India |
Michelle Scobie | University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad & Tobago |
Dinesh Wadiwel | University of Sydney, Australia |
- Clarivate Analytics: Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI)
- ProQuest
- Scopus
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.