Dialogues in Urban Research
Dialogues in Urban Research publishes substantive articles, with shorter commentaries and an author response , which seek to critique present thinking and practice and set the agenda for future directions of urban thought, empirical research and teaching. Each issue has two forums, each comprising a substantive article, five commentaries on the article, and the author’s response.
The journal will be theoretical in orientation, forward looking, and seek to publish original and innovative work that pushes the boundaries through a unique and innovative format of open peer commentary. The journal will be intentionally inter-disciplinary, fostering conversations between (sub)disciplines (e.g. anthropology, economics, geography, planning, and sociology) engaged in urban research.
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Dialogues in Urban Research is intended to stimulate open and critical debate on the philosophical, methodological and pedagogic foundations of urban theory and praxis.
It will publish articles, with responses, which seek to critique present thinking and praxis and set the agenda for future avenues of urban thought, empirical research and pedagogy. Dialogues will be theoretical in orientation, forward looking, and seek to publish original and innovative work that pushes the boundaries of urban theory, praxis and pedagogy through a unique (in urban research) and innovative format of open peer commentary. The journal will be intentionally inter-disciplinary, fostering conversations between (sub)disciplines (e.g. anthropology, economics, geography, planning, sociology) engaged in urban research.
This format strongly encourages engaged dialogue. The scope of the journal will be both the broad agenda of the field as a whole (and in relation to the social sciences, humanities, and environmental sciences more generally) and specific ideas, debates, and modes of praxis within disciplinary sub-fields. It will therefore have relevance and utility to those interested in all aspects of urban research across the social sciences.
To achieve engagement and debate between contributors, Dialogues in Urban Research will adopt the format of open peer commentary.
Mark Davidson | Clark University, USA |
Susan Moore | University College London, UK |
Elvin Wyly | University of British Columbia, Canada |
Ugo Rossi | Gran Sasso Science Institute, Italy |
Pushpa Arabindoo | University College London, UK |
Stefano Bloch | The University of Arizona, USA |
Neil Brenner | University of Chicago, USA |
Karen Coelho | Madras Institute of Development Studies, India |
Stefanie Duhr | University of South Australia, Australia |
Amy D. Finstein | Department of Visual Arts, College of the Holy Cross |
Jennifer Foster | York University, Canada |
Prince Guma | British Institute in Eastern Africa, Kenya |
Kurt Iveson | Sydney University, Australia |
Ihnji Jon | University of Melbourne, Australia |
Nik Kharlamov | Aalborg University, Denmark |
Peter Laurence | Clemson University, USA |
Patrick Le Gales | Sciences Po, France |
Loretta Lees | University of Leicester, UK |
Federico Martellozzo | University of Florence, Italy |
Colin McFarlane | Durham University, UK |
Mary McLeod | Columbia University, USA |
Jennie Middleton | Oxford University, UK |
Madeleine Pill | University of Sheffield, UK |
Mike Raco | University College London, UK |
Joel Rast | University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA |
Patrick Rerat | University of Lausanne, Switzerland |
Jennifer Robinson | Chair of Human Geography, University College London, UK |
Hyun Bang Shin | London School of Economics and Political Science, UK |
Nick Smith | Barnard College, USA |
Kubo Tomoko | Univesity of Tsukuba, Japan |
Fran Tonkiss | London School of Economics, UK |
Kevin Ward | University of Manchester, UK |
Mildred Warner | Cornell University, USA |
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.