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Call for Publications

Theme: Racial Justice and Peace History
Subtitle: Is it 'Different' This Time?
Publication: Peace & Change. A Journal of Peace Research
Date: Special Issue (2021)
Deadline: 31.1.2021

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John Lewis and C.T. Vivian, two icons of the racial justice movement
known for their courageous nonviolent challenges to segregation and
inequality, died in Atlanta on June 17, 2020. They were laid to rest
amid a storm of rising COVID-19 case numbers and deaths
disproportionately affecting communities of color; of widespread,
persistent protests against police murders of Black people; of
federal Homeland Security agents descending on Portland, Oregon, and
other cities to confront peaceful protesters and whisk some away in
unmarked vans; and of rising concerns about voter disenfranchisement
for the November election. The recent killings of George Floyd,
Ahmaud Arbery, and Breonna Taylor, among others, along with the
record-breaking protests have led many organizations to issue
statements about their commitment to racial justice and at least some
to follow up on those statements with action. Many participants and
observers have noted the opportunity for change, saying that it feels
“different” this time around.

This proposed special issue of Peace & Change represents one way the
Peace History Society can contribute to our understanding of the
present moment, encouraging and highlighting new scholarship on the
relationship between peace and racial justice. What are the animating
visions that have driven movements for peace and justice and who
participated in them? What connections have activists made between
these two causes, and what have they accomplished? How have
definitions of peace and racial justice changed over time, and who
has had the power to define them?

Peace historians and educators are accustomed to thinking about peace
as the presence of justice, but these connections beg for further
interrogation. How have theoretical connections between peace and
justice played out in practice? What have been the challenges and
successes in bringing causes of peace and justice together? This
issue will go beyond the well-known stories of how African Americans
contributed to bringing nonviolent methods into social movements and
address more complex connections between peace and racial justice in
theory and practice. We are interested in transnational,
interdisciplinary, and innovative approaches to themes such as the
following:

- Peace and racial justice in music, literature, graphic and
  performing arts
- Movements that prioritized both peace and racial justice
- The meaning(s) of violence and nonviolence
- The history of policing and prisons and proposals for alternatives
- Structural/Systemic/Slow violence and Peace Studies
- Peace education and racial justice
- Antiwar/peace movements and racial justice
- Race, class, and nonviolence
- Gender, race, and peace activism
- Law, racial justice, and peace
- Environmental justice and peace issues
- War, militarism, and communities of color
- Patriotism and racial justice
- Queer theory, peace, and justice
- The language and culture of movements for peace and justice

Essays of up to 10,000 words are due January 31, 2021.

Authors must address the guest editor Robbie Lieberman at
rlieb...@kennesaw.edu and clearly indicate in a cover letter that the
submission is intended for the 2021 special issue.

Contact:

Robbie Lieberman
Peace & Change. A Journal of Peace Research
Email: rlieb...@kennesaw.edu
Web:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/page/journal/14680130/homepage/forauthors.html




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