Geography and environment: A time of change

IF 1.7 Q2 GEOGRAPHY
Karen Bickerstaff, Christopher Darvill, Laurie Parsons, Le Yu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Around the world, the environmental crisis is deepening. The atmosphere, oceans, cryosphere and terrestrial ecosystems: all are under stress and many living species are being pushed towards extinction. Climate change, a key facet of this crisis, is unfolding rapidly, with glaciers melting in line with worst-case scenarios. Rising global temperatures are fuelling socio-ecological damage with distinctly uneven geographical consequences. We are, for instance, seeing the intensification of heat waves, droughts, floods, storms and fires, which in turn are exacerbating food and water insecurity, economic disruption and armed conflict. The impact of human activities is being written into the geological record at a pace never before seen.

These critical environmental issues, and our individual and collective responses to them, are profoundly reshaping the geographies of our lives and will continue to do so far into the future. As such, they pose some critical challenges for us, as geographers, to consider: how, for example, can we mobilise the capabilities of the discipline to conceptualise and describe these processes of social and environmental change? How, moreover, might we advance, and advocate for, more sustainable, lower carbon and fairer socio-ecological places and futures? As a discipline bridging the social and natural sciences, geographers are uniquely placed to provide answers to these questions and to play a vital role in accelerating solutions that ensure shared prosperity and well-being by advancing novel, collaborative approaches to tackle climate change, secure biodiversity and maintain ecosystems.

It is within this urgent context that Geo now positions itself: as a repository for innovative, experimental and impactful scholarship - addressing some of the biggest environmental challenges facing society today through a distinctly geographical lens. We seek contributions that push the envelope of geographical scholarship: breaking new intellectual ground, developing new formats and approaches, building new collaborations and communities, and working towards new policy.

In framing this agenda for Geo, we owe a huge debt of gratitude to our predecessors who have so carefully nurtured and curated the journal since its inception in 2014, as the first fully open access journal published by the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG). Gail Davies and Anson Mackay, as inaugural editors, established Geo as a space for exploring collaborative research, pioneering the use of open access to support novel formats and build a diverse Geo community. Under their leadership, the journal rapidly became a place for exciting, interdisciplinary research and dialogue, often speaking across traditional geographical divides. Since 2019, Rosie Cox, Sarah Davies and David Demerit have, against the backdrop of the severe challenges posed by the Covid pandemic, continued to make the case for an open access, interdisciplinary, environment-facing journal.

Our mission at Geo is now to build on, extend and expand these core values to present an inclusive space for dialogue, attracting thinking and thinkers from across and beyond the discipline on matters of the environment, climate change and sustainability. We will be the environmental journal that welcomes new, critical and under-represented ideas; a home for leading scholars and emerging voices to come together in pursuit of fresh viewpoints and solutions to the world's pressing environmental problems. These themes, ultimately, will be guided by you, our audience and contributors. In the first instance, though, we offer five principles of scholarship, through which Geo will nurture and develop a community.

First, Geo seeks to provide a critical arena for bringing together geographical and interdisciplinary research around the following topics: the Anthropocene, Capitalocene, and the politics of climate change; methods and perspectives on progressing the UN Sustainable Development Goals; novel or fresh evidence on climate damage and natural ecosystem loss; engaged environment and sustainability research; the decolonisation and democratisation of environmental knowledge; environmental health (e.g. toxic hazards, pollution and harm); breakthrough technologies (e.g. Artificial Intelligence, Virtual Reality) in geography and environment studies; environmental governance, activism and policy.

Second, Geo is intended as a forum that promotes inclusion while maintaining a high standard of peer assessment. Part of the journal's mission is to fill in the gaps, to cover issues, methods and perspectives that might be overlooked in other journals, so we are flexible in the submissions that we welcome. They may be theoretical, empirical, commentary, review or dialogue based. Yet we encourage, in particular, submissions from the Global South, and contributions that reflect the full range of (sub)disciplines, and professions, that engage with geography. We will actively seek out contributors and communities habitually excluded from the academy, providing freely accessible material and waivers to groups less able to meet open access fees.

Third, Geo is proud to support a range of formats that build on a vision of geographical scholarship that speaks to the widest possible communities. As an online journal we are able to offer flexibility around the length of papers. In addition to traditional written papers, we also encourage submissions that exploit the full potential of the online publishing environment to advance geographical understanding - including (but not restricted to) imagery, multi-media sound and video, computer animation and code, open access data, graphic art.

Fourth, Geo seeks to provide a forum for lively debate on key environmental themes and the ways in which geographers are engaging with these topics. We are clear that the journal must develop its role as a forum for dynamic modes of collaboration, exchange and debate. We therefore welcome submissions that cross boundaries – disciplinary, geographic and professional. We will introduce and promote new formats to support this aim. Short pieces presented as a Dialogue between two or more authors on a topical concern will provide a flexible vehicle for academics to publish together and to involve those outside the discipline and outside the academy. Drawing fully on our international editorial board, we will develop Geo Themes that will define some of the core interests of the journal. A theme might, for instance, bring together a number of authors to build a collection of papers around a core area of research. These thematic concerns will evolve over time and all related contributions will be presented as a coherent body of work on the website. Regular editorials from us, and from the editorial board, will frame the agenda for Geo and we will always be open to suggestions about themes we might pursue.

Fifth, Geo will provide an outlet for papers on matters of professional interest to geographers and to a range of audiences who engage with the discipline (e.g., those active in policy, the media, education, activism, business). We encourage submissions that address geography's wider societal role in public, political and cultural life; that reflect on our professional practice as educators, researchers and coproducers of knowledge; and which explore the ethical issues that inflect our varied (inter)disciplinary engagements with the environment, climate change and sustainability. In this regard Geo is well-served by its status as a fully open access journal. Reflecting and enhancing this role as a more-than-academic journal, we will aim to be rapid and agile in our management of submissions, offering a fast turnaround from acceptance to publication, and supporting rapid dissemination of research, ideas and debates.

In sum, our vision is for an innovative and agenda-setting journal that offers an open and creative space to explore the many ways in which geographers are thinking about, and shaping responses to, the rapid environmental changes and complex sustainability challenges that are set to define the 21st Century. More than simply a repository of academic work, Geo will be a forum to develop environmental scholarship and a community to share it.

地理与环境:变化的时代
在世界范围内,环境危机正在加深。大气、海洋、冰冻圈和陆地生态系统:所有这些都承受着压力,许多生物物种正濒临灭绝。气候变化是这场危机的一个关键方面,它正在迅速展开,冰川融化与最坏的情况一致。全球气温上升正在加剧社会生态破坏,造成明显不均衡的地理后果。例如,我们看到热浪、干旱、洪水、风暴和火灾的加剧,这反过来又加剧了粮食和水的不安全、经济中断和武装冲突。人类活动的影响正以前所未有的速度写入地质记录。这些关键的环境问题,以及我们个人和集体对这些问题的反应,正在深刻地重塑我们生活的地理位置,并将在未来继续这样做。因此,它们给我们地理学家提出了一些关键的挑战:例如,我们如何调动这门学科的能力来概念化和描述这些社会和环境变化的过程?此外,我们如何推进和倡导更可持续、更低碳、更公平的社会生态场所和未来?作为一门连接社会科学和自然科学的学科,地理学家具有独特的地位,可以为这些问题提供答案,并通过推进应对气候变化、保护生物多样性和维护生态系统的新颖合作方法,在加速确保共享繁荣和福祉的解决方案方面发挥至关重要的作用。正是在这种紧迫的背景下,Geo现在将自己定位为:创新,实验和有影响力的学术知识库-通过独特的地理镜头解决当今社会面临的一些最大的环境挑战。我们寻求推动地理学术的贡献:突破新的知识领域,开发新的格式和方法,建立新的合作和社区,并致力于制定新的政策。在为《地理》制定这一议程时,我们非常感谢我们的前辈,他们自2014年创刊以来一直精心培育和策划该杂志,使其成为皇家地理学会(与IBG)出版的第一本完全开放获取的期刊。Gail Davies和Anson Mackay作为首任编辑,将Geo建立为一个探索合作研究的空间,率先使用开放获取来支持新颖的格式,并建立一个多样化的地理社区。在他们的领导下,该杂志迅速成为一个令人兴奋的跨学科研究和对话的地方,经常跨越传统的地理鸿沟。自2019年以来,罗西·考克斯、莎拉·戴维斯和大卫·德梅里特在新冠肺炎大流行带来的严峻挑战的背景下,继续为一本开放获取、跨学科、面向环境的期刊辩护。我们在Geo的使命是在这些核心价值的基础上,扩展和扩展这些核心价值,以提供一个包容性的对话空间,吸引来自环境、气候变化和可持续发展等领域内外的思想和思想家。我们将成为欢迎新的、批判性的和未被充分代表的观点的环境杂志;主要学者和新兴声音聚集在一起,为世界紧迫的环境问题寻求新的观点和解决方案。这些主题最终将由你们、我们的听众和撰稿人来指导。首先,我们提供了五项奖学金原则,Geo将通过这些原则培育和发展一个社区。首先,Geo寻求提供一个关键的舞台,将围绕以下主题的地理和跨学科研究结合在一起:人类世、资本世和气候变化的政治;推进联合国可持续发展目标的方法和观点;关于气候破坏和自然生态系统丧失的新证据;从事环境和可持续发展研究;环境知识的非殖民化和民主化;环境卫生(如有毒危害、污染和危害);地理与环境研究中的突破性技术(如人工智能、虚拟现实);环境治理、行动主义和政策。其次,Geo旨在成为一个促进包容的论坛,同时保持高标准的同行评估。该期刊的部分使命是填补空白,涵盖其他期刊可能忽略的问题、方法和观点,因此我们在欢迎的投稿中是灵活的。它们可能是理论的、经验的、评论的、回顾的或基于对话的。然而,我们特别鼓励来自全球南方的投稿,以及反映与地理有关的所有学科(子)学科和专业的投稿。 我们将积极寻找那些习惯上被排除在学院之外的贡献者和社区,提供免费获取的材料,并为那些无法支付开放获取费用的群体提供豁免。第三,Geo很自豪能够支持一系列基于地理学术愿景的格式,这些愿景与尽可能广泛的社区对话。作为一份在线期刊,我们能够在论文长度方面提供灵活性。除了传统的书面论文外,我们也鼓励利用在线出版环境的全部潜力来促进地理认识的提交-包括(但不限于)图像,多媒体声音和视频,计算机动画和代码,开放获取数据,图形艺术。第四,地理杂志寻求提供一个论坛,就关键的环境主题和地理学家参与这些主题的方式进行热烈的辩论。我们很清楚,该杂志必须发挥其作为动态合作、交流和辩论模式论坛的作用。因此,我们欢迎跨越学科、地域和专业界限的投稿。我们将推出和推广新的模式来支持这一目标。以两位或多位作者就某一主题进行对话的形式发表的短篇文章,将为学者们共同发表提供一种灵活的方式,并使学科外和学院外的人参与其中。充分利用我们的国际编辑委员会,我们将开发地理主题,这将定义期刊的一些核心利益。例如,一个主题可以将许多作者聚集在一起,围绕一个核心研究领域建立一个论文集。这些主题问题将随着时间的推移而演变,所有相关的贡献将作为一个连贯的工作体在网站上呈现。我们和编委会的定期社论将为Geo制定议程,我们将始终对我们可能追求的主题提出建议。第五,地理杂志将为地理学家和一系列与该学科相关的读者(例如,那些活跃于政策、媒体、教育、行动主义和商业领域的人)提供一个发表专业兴趣问题论文的渠道。我们鼓励提交关于地理在公共、政治和文化生活中更广泛的社会作用的作品;这反映了我们作为教育工作者、研究人员和知识共同创造者的专业实践;并探讨影响我们与环境,气候变化和可持续发展的各种(跨)学科合作的伦理问题。在这方面,《地理》是一本完全开放获取的期刊。作为一份超越学术的期刊,我们的目标是快速和灵活地管理投稿,提供从接受到出版的快速周转,并支持研究、思想和辩论的快速传播。总而言之,我们的愿景是成为一本具有创新性和议程设置性的期刊,提供一个开放和创造性的空间,以探索地理学家思考和塑造应对21世纪快速环境变化和复杂可持续性挑战的多种方式。Geo不仅仅是一个学术著作的储存库,它还将成为一个发展环境学术的论坛和一个分享环境学术的社区。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
审稿时长
25 weeks
期刊介绍: Geo is a fully open access international journal publishing original articles from across the spectrum of geographical and environmental research. Geo welcomes submissions which make a significant contribution to one or more of the journal’s aims. These are to: • encompass the breadth of geographical, environmental and related research, based on original scholarship in the sciences, social sciences and humanities; • bring new understanding to and enhance communication between geographical research agendas, including human-environment interactions, global North-South relations and academic-policy exchange; • advance spatial research and address the importance of geographical enquiry to the understanding of, and action about, contemporary issues; • foster methodological development, including collaborative forms of knowledge production, interdisciplinary approaches and the innovative use of quantitative and/or qualitative data sets; • publish research articles, review papers, data and digital humanities papers, and commentaries which are of international significance.
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