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Call for Papers

Special Issue of Environmental Communication:  A Journal of Nature and Culture 
(2010 ISI impact factor 0.568)

Volume 6, No. 2, June 2012 (Projected)

Environmental Justice in International Contexts

Editor:  Stacey Sowards, University of Texas at El Paso

The importance of communicating about and for environmental justice issues in 
national and global contexts is increasingly important in the 21st century as 
we are confronted with environmental problems such as air and water pollution, 
climate change, development and sustainability issues, and the role of people 
within local/global contexts.  The purpose of this special issue is to address 
how environmental communication scholars and practitioners address and 
understand such environmental justice issues in international contexts, 
building upon scholarship presented at the June 2011 Conference on 
Communication and the Environment (COCE).  COCE’s 2011 theme addressed 
environmental justice in international contexts, and the focus of this special 
issue is to bring that theme to the forefront of environmental communication 
scholarship.

Recent interdisciplinary scholarship has re-examined the environmental justice 
movement in the United States since its advent in the 1980s.  In particular, 
Sandler and Pezzullo’s (2007) book Environmental Justice and Environmentalism:  
The Social Justice Challenge to the Environmental Movement calls for study of 
how environmental movements can work together with environmental justice 
movements, while recognizing their differences and important contributions to a 
broader concept of justice, both human and non-human.  Cotton and Motta’s 
(2011) recently published conference proceedings from the 9th Global Conference 
on Environmental Justice and Global Citizenship (Engaging with Environmental 
Justice:  Governance, Education and Leadership) also demonstrate the importance 
of expanding our understanding of environmental justice in global contexts with 
essays that explore environmental justice themes related to education, law and 
government, technology, and climate change, among others.

Building from such scholarship, this call for papers is open to essays that 
expand our thinking about environmental communication related to justice and 
international contexts.  Possible topics might include, but are not limited to:
•       Theoretical discussions related to environmental justice issues
•       Analysis of specific environmental justice cases
•       Representations of environmental justice issues in mediated contexts
•       Global environmentalism in local contexts
•       Postcolonial analyses of environmental problems or organizations
•       Border issues related to environmental communication
•       Intersections of race, gender, class and environmentalism
•       Conceptual framing of environmental justice
•       Global effects of environmental problems in local contexts (e.g., 
climate justice)
•       Cultural and rhetorical differences in environmental framing

General Guidelines for Submissions:
•       Papers are accepted only in English. American English spelling and 
punctuation is preferred. Double quotation marks rather than single are used 
unless the "quotation is 'within' another". 
•       A typical article will not exceed 8,000 words. Papers that greatly 
exceed this will be critically reviewed with respect to length. Authors should 
include a word count with their manuscript. 
•       Manuscripts should be compiled in the following order: title page; 
abstract; keywords; main text; acknowledgments; appendices (as appropriate); 
references; table(s) with caption(s) (on individual pages); figure caption(s) 
(as a list). 
•       Manuscripts should be double-spaced throughout including the reference 
section, with wide (3 cm) margins, and all pages should be numbered. All 
figures, tables, and illustrations should be numbered consecutively and placed 
at the end of the manuscript. Captions, scales, keys, source details, and other 
critical wording should be included. 
•       Abstracts of up to 150 words are required for all papers submitted. 
•       Each paper should have approximately five keywords. 
•       Section headings should be concise. 
•       All manuscripts will be evaluated through a blind peer-review system. 
Because this journal is international and interdisciplinary in scope, we 
request the author's assistance in the review process. When submitting a 
manuscript, authors are invited to provide the names and e-mail contact 
information of at least two referees who are qualified to evaluate the 
manuscript. While we may not consult the suggested readers, it will be useful 
to have the author's suggestions regarding appropriate referees. 
•       To ensure double-blind peer review, the authors of a paper should 
include their full names, affiliations, postal addresses, telephone and fax 
numbers and email addresses on a separate cover page. One author should be 
identified as the Corresponding Author. 
•       Please supply a short biographical note for each author. 
•       For all manuscripts non-discriminatory language is mandatory. Sexist or 
racist terms should not be used. 
•       For further details on manuscript submission, please refer to the 
“Instructions for authors” on the journals website 
(http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/renc). Upon notification of acceptance, 
authors must assign copyright to Taylor and Francis and provide copyright 
clearance for any copyrighted material.

Manuscripts should be submitted by no later than 11:00 pm, Mountain Standard 
Time (USA), September 30, 2011 via Manuscript Central (see above).  Questions 
should be addressed to Stacey Sowards ([email protected]) or Steve Depoe 
([email protected])

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