Special issues

Browse all special issues from Ethnic and Racial Studies.

All issues
Collections
Transnational Politics from a Transatlantic Perspective
Volume 31, Issue 4, 2008 pages 645-841
Whiteness and White Identities
Volume 31, Issue 1, 2008 pages v-213
Racist Futures
Volume 30, Issue 4, 2007 pages 527-685
Feminism and Postcolonialism: Knowledge/Politics
Volume 30, Issue 2, 2007 pages 191-340
Social capital,migration and transnational families
Volume 29, Issue 6, 2006 pages 1025-1186
Writing Race: Ethnography and Difference
Volume 29, Issue 3, 2006 pages 397-604
The Second Generation in Early Adulthood
Volume 28, Issue 6, 2005 pages 983-1214
Ethnicity and religion
Volume 20, Issue 2, 1997 pages 235-ebi
Teaching race and ethnicity: Disciplinary perspectives
Volume 19, Issue 4, 1996 pages 777-ebi
Migration and the new Europe
Volume 16, Issue 3, 1993 pages 373-579
Migration and Migrants in France
Volume 14, Issue 3, 1991 pages 265-438
National identity in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union
Volume 14, Issue 1, 1991 pages 1-125

Special issue information

Special Issues

Ethnic and Racial Studies welcomes the submission of proposals for special issues in the months of October and April. Proposals are welcome on all topics relevant to the journal, and in particular, those drawing on research focused on Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, Indigeneity, and issues concerned with Postcolonialism and Decolonisation.

In preparing a proposal for Ethnic and Racial Studies please read the journal’s Aims & Scope. Examples of previously published Special Issues can be found in the list above.


Special Issues are usually focused on a research topic or question and comprised of 8 to 10 articles plus an editorial written by the guest editors. A significant degree of coherence is expected between the contributions that should be highlighted in the editorial. Non-standard formats may also be considered such as blogs, videos, interviews.

Submitting a Proposal

Proposals for special issues can be submitted in the months of October and April. They should be sent to the Editor-in-Chief Professor John Solomos and Managing Editor Amanda Eastell-Bleakley at [email protected].

They will be reviewed by the editorial team based on fit to the Aims & Scope as well as quality, originality and coherence of the contributions and the issue as a whole. A decision can be expected in the month after submission. The journal may also ask for a revision of the proposal (e.g., to clarify certain aspects, or change the number of contributions) before it can be accepted.

Special Issue proposals should contain the following information:

  • Working title
  • Contact details and biography of the Guest Editors
  • Rationale, proposal origin and context including international appeal and impact in real-world as a result of the research
  • Preliminary table of contents
  • List of contributors with affiliation
  • Outline of papers with abstracts if available
  • Timetable leading up to submission to the journal
  • Launch events for the special issue (conference events, panels)
  • Publicity for the special issue (websites, newsletters, social media, networks, blogs, videos, interviews)
  • Any other special issues or edited books derived from the same research

Process after Proposals get accepted

Once a proposal has been accepted the Managing Editor will arrange a video meeting with the Guest Editor(s) to explain exactly how the SI process works with ERS, to firm up the timeline and to explain the guidelines for keyword optimisation, ethics requirements, referencing and of course to answer questions Guest Editors raise.

Guest editors are expected to work closely together with the Managing Editor of the journal by supporting the review process (providing suggestions for suitable reviewers, reviewing articles in later stages), communicating with the authors about deadlines, deciding the final running order of the issue, writing an editorial Introduction and helping with the promotion of the special issue once it’s published.

All Special Issue articles are peer reviewed under standard journal procedures which are available here. Contributors to the Special Issue cannot be reviewers.

Questions?

For any questions regarding the content, process or practicalities of a special issue proposal please contact Professor John Solomos or Amanda Eastell-Bleakley – [email protected].