Journal of Peacebuilding and Development

journal of peacebuilding and development book cover

 

ISSN 1542-3166 (Print), 2165-7440 (Online)

Publication Frequency 3 issues per year

Browse JPD Editorials with free access

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JPD is a refereed journal providing a forum for the sharing of critical thinking and constructive action at the intersections of conflict, development and peace. As a refereed journal with a unique mission, JPD offers a professional and respected tool for promoting dialogue and expanding networks on critical peacebuilding discussions towards coherent, constructive action. Our networks of scholar communities, policy-makers and advisors, practitioners and activists across the North and South that we serve and seek to better serve engage in dialogue around critical issues at the heart of our collective global search for peace. JPD’s capturing of innovative practices, policy analysis and recommendations, and theory derived from the on-the-ground realities that people in conflict and fragile contexts face, offers holistic, practical and visionary approaches that seek to influence policy and practice in ways that support transformative processes globally.

Economic Anthropology

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Economic Anthropology is published by the Society for Economic Anthropology (SEA) to make available research that is innovative and interdisciplinary and focused on economic and social life to serve scholars, practitioners, and general audiences. Contributors to the journal represent a wide range of disciplines including cultural anthropology, archaeology, sociology, demography, economics, ecology, geography, and history. In 2017, Economic Anthropology doubled its annual publication list from one to two: a theme-based issue pegged to our annual conference, and a new Open Submission issue representing a wide variety of research engaged with economy and society.

 

 

 

 

  • Economic Anthropology was founded in 2013 during the transition from the SEA’s independent status to a society within the American Anthropological Association (AAA). The premier issue was published in January 2014. In 2015, the journal recorded the single highest rate of growth for readership for all 33 journals housed in the AAA. In 2017, the journal expanded to include two issues per year—the theme-based publication, and an open-submission issue.

    For 30 years preceding the founding of the journal, the SEA published an annual volume of articles drawn from the Annual SEA Spring Conference. Annual themes reflect issues of current debate and significance and have included, for example, Technologies, Energy, Inequality, Cities, Greed, Landscape, Cooperation, Tourism, Disaster, Morality, Textiles, and Food. The journal continued the successful tradition of publishing a theme-based annual issue but with a high-quality online format, full indexing of articles, a forward-looking vision, and the support of Wiley publishing and AAA, the journal is able to reach a broad base of scholars and publics.

    To further the goal of making the most current research available to a broad audience, Economic Anthropology emphasizes clear and accessible writing. We encourage authors to take advantage of the journal’s online format and incorporate photos, graphics, and links to video or other related materials. The journal considers the work of scholars at all points in their careers, including advanced PhD students.

  • Economic Anthropology, economy, Society for Economic Anthropology, American Anthropological Association, social, cultural, archaeology, economics, political economy, livelihoods, work, income, poverty, environment, resources, agriculture, production, distribution, consumption, crafts, justice, morality, migration, urban, rural, cooperation, household, kinship, Latin America, Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, ecology, artisan, common property.
  • If you have questions, please feel free to email Brandon D. Lundy, Editor, at economicanthro@americananthro.org. We look forward to your submissions.

Economic Anthropology Resources

Peace and Conflict Management Working Papers Series

The Peace and Conflict Management Working Papers Series is a non-refereed online publication in the field of Peace Studies and Conflict Management and Resolution. The series is offered as an outlet for papers that are in various stages of development prior to publication in refereed journals or books and, in some cases, submitted by the authors to solicit feedback from the larger academic community on their theory, argument, or interpretation. The authors hold copyright to the papers. Once published elsewhere in a refereed outlet, authors may ask the Center for Conflict Management to take down the papers from the Working Papers Series.

Papers published in this series may be cited, with or without permission of the author(s), as follows:
Author. (Year). Title. Peace and Conflict Management Working Paper No. ??, pp ?-??.

Comments are welcome on the papers, and should be directed to the individual authors.

Submissions should prepared in in Word or RTF format, using the APA Style, and emailed to ccm@kennesaw.edu.

Read, download, and comment on current papers in the series

Research Teams

The Center conducts research on conflict and conflict-related subjects through teams of interested faculty, graduate students, and others with expertise on respective research themes or topics.

  • Research Team on Managing Migration, Immigration and Cross-Border Conflicts
  • Research Team on Managing Electoral Conflicts
  • Research Team on Managing Environmental Conflicts
  • Research Team on Managing Racial and Ethnic Conflicts
  • Research Team on Managing Religious Conflicts
  • Research Team on International Business Conflicts and Negotiations
  • Research Team on Indigenous Conflict Resolution Mechanisms

Recent Publications from the Center

indigenous conflict management strategies in west africa book cover
Title of Book: Indigenous Conflict Management Strategies: Beyond Right and Wrong

Editors: Akanmu G. Adebayo, Brandon D.Lundy, Jesse J. Benjamin, Joseph Kingsley Adjei

Publisher: Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2014

Available at:
Lexington Books
Amazon

Indigenous Conflict Management Strategies: Global Prespectives book cover
Title of Book: Indigenous Conflict Management Strategies: Global Prespectives

Editors: Akanmu G. Adebayo, Jesse J. Benjamin, and Brandon D. Lundy

Publisher: Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2014

Available at:
Lexington Books
Amazon

Managing Conflicts in Africa's Democratic Transitions
Title of Book: Managing Conflicts in Africa's Democratic Transitions

Editor: Akanmu Adebayo

Publisher: Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2012

Available at:
Lexington Books
Amazon

Dispute Resolution and Conflict Management in Nigeria and Cameroon
Negotiation: Dispute Resolution and Conflict Management in Nigeria and Cameroon
Volume 9, Number 2, 2014

Available at KSU Digital Commons