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Humanity & Society

Humanity & Society

Published in Association with Association for Humanist Sociology

eISSN: 23729708 | ISSN: 01605976 | Current volume: 49 | Current issue: 4 Frequency: Quarterly

Humanity & Society, the official journal of the Association for Humanist Sociology, was first
published in 1977 and has been published quarterly since 1978. Humanity & Society is a peer-reviewed Sage journal with abstracts of published articles appearing in Sociological Abstracts. It features “humanist sociology,” which is broadly defined as a sociology that views people not only as products of social forces but also as agents in their lives and the world. We publish activist-oriented, public scholarship that directly applies a social justice lens. We encourage work that engages in how to advance movements and how to participate in our collective, social struggle. Please see “aims and scope” for more detailed information

This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).

Please direct all general inquiries to Editor-in-Chief, Dresden Lackey, Cameron Lippard and Managing Editor, Heidi Nicholls, at humanityandsocietyjournal@gmail.com

For Pedagogy specific questions, contact Editor Dr. Myron Strong at hspedagogyeditor@gmail.com

For Book and Media Reviews inquiries and submissions, contact Editors Dr. Shaonta’ Allen at ahsbooksreviews@gmail.com

To learn more about our full editorial board, see: https://www.humanist-sociology.org/editorial-board.html
 
Our logo was created by Natalia Veras

Submit your manuscript today at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/has

Humanity & Society (H&S) publishes:

  • Activist-oriented, public scholarship that directly applies a social justice lens. Work should engage in how to advance movements and how to participate in our collective, social struggle.
  • Sociological work that has interdisciplinary and global perspectives, including but not limited to critical ethnic studies, women & gender studies, queer theory, history, and geography.
  • Theoretical orientations that map onto or reflect a humanist agenda such as anti-imperialism, Black feminisms, decoloniality, community and social movements, critical class analyses, critical disability studies, critical race studies, indigenous studies, intersectionality, Marxist humanist theories, postcolonial theories and perspectives, settler colonialism, queer theory, and queer of color critique, and women of color feminisms.
  • Methodologies can be varied and critical; novel approaches are welcome.
  • Manuscripts that challenge or deviate from traditional paper organization and push the boundaries of sociological styles of writing.

    Humanity & Society general paper submissions should be 8,000 - 10,000 words and may include original research, theoretical examinations, & historical analyses.

Other manuscript types include:

  • Pedagogy: Manuscripts with innovative teaching approaches, either empirically and/or theoretically, that focus on social justice and social change (approx: 3500-4000 words). See below for more information.
  • Book and Media Reviews: Critical essays on books and media such as television shows, films, podcasts, social media content, video and other games, and blogs/vlogs (approx: 900-1000 words). See below for more information
  • Dispatches: Our new online blog, which welcomes critical commentaries, essays from activists on the ground, and brief pedagogy or media reviews (approx: 500-1500 words). https://www.humanist-sociology.org/dispatches

H&S is committed to an open, peer review process that encourages dialogue. To that end, authors and reviewers are all non-anonymous to one another. In our view, this open method of reviewing does not diminish the rigor, integrity, and validity of the peer-review process. Rather, we believe it creates a more open and honest dialogue between authors and reviewers.

Scholars who support our mission are also encouraged to register with Manuscript Central as potential reviewers.

Please direct your inquiries and ideas to: Dresden Lackey, Cameron Lippard, Editor-In-Chief, and Heidi Nicholls, Managing Editor, at humanityandsocietyjournal@gmail.com

Humanity & Society Pedagogy Section (3,500-4,000 words):

  • Manuscripts that add to the scholarship by using innovative approaches, either empirically and/or theoretically, and focus on social justice, activism and social change.
  • Particularly looking for pedagogical approaches that stretch the boundaries of methodologies by using nontraditional sources such as comics, blogs, social media, etc to explore social justice, activism and social change.
  • Manuscripts that build pedagogical theory and reflect a humanist agenda such as anti-imperialism, Black feminisms, decoloniality, community and social movements, critical class analyses, critical disability studies, critical race studies, indigenous studies, intersectionality, Marxist humanist theories, postcolonial theories and perspectives, settler colonialism, queer theory, and queer of color critique, and women of color feminisms.
  • Methodologies can be varied and critical as well as creative in the way pedagogy is researched, constructed and imagined.
  • Manuscripts that challenge or deviate from traditional paper organization and push the boundaries of sociological styles of writing.

Humanity & Society Book & Media Reviews (900-1000 words)

Humanity & Society’s editorial board believes that the relationships between scholar, scholarship, and community are mutually constitutive. As the Book & Media Review Editors, we particularly recognize the power of books and other forms of media in this moment and look forward to highlighting critical and social justice-oriented work to demonstrate how sociological scholarship is relevant for understanding and responding to pressing human needs.

Humanity & Society Book and Media Reviews Section publishes:

  • Book Reviews from either academic or public-facing facing presses
  • Media reviews including, but not limited to, television shows, films, podcasts, social media content, video and other games, and blogs/vlogs
  • Two new forms of Feature Reviews
    • “From the Margins,” which highlights a review from an underrepresented scholar and/or a review on a marginalized topic
    • “From the Ground,” which highlights a review from an activist, community organizer, or other community member/leader
  • Reviews that come from advanced graduate students and junior faculty; scholars with marginalized standpoints are especially welcome. 

To inquire about books in need of review or to pitch a book or media review, please email Book & Media Review Editors Shaonta’ Allen, AHSBookReviews@gmail.com

Co-Editors-in-Chief
Book & Media Review Editors
Shaonta’ Allen Dartmouth College, USA
Pedagogy Editor
Myron T. Strong Community College of Baltimore County, USA
Deputy Editors
Emma Bailey Universidad Veracruzana, Mexico
Emily Brissette Bridgewater State University, USA
Ghassan Moussawi University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, USA
Jason Williams Montclair University, USA
Associate Editors
Felicia Arriaga Baruch College, USA
Brittany Battle Wake Forest Unversity, USA
Carson Byrd University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, USA
Kaitland Byrd University of Michigan, USA
David G. Embrick University of Connecticut, USA
Kasey Henricks University of Tennessee, USA
Marie-Claude Jipguep Howard University, USA
Melissa Lavin State University of New York at Oneonta, USA
Wende Marshall Stadium Stompers, People’s Strike, USA
Austin McCoy West Virginia University, USA
Zebulon Miletsky Stonybrook University, USA
Greta Pennell University of Indianapolis, USA
James Pennell University of Indiana at Indianapolis, USA
Watoii R. Rabii Oakland University, USA
Courtney B. Ross Virginia Tech, USA
Joti Sekhon Winston-Salem State University, USA
Saher Selod Simmons University, USA
Marc Settembrino Southeastern Louisiana University, USA
Thomas Piñeros Shields University of Massachusetts Lowell, USA
Katherine Standish University of Otago, New Zealand
Bhoomi Thakore University of Connecticut, USA
Mo Torres Harvard University, USA
Megan Underhill University of North Carolina Asheville, USA
Melissa Weiner College of the Holy Cross, USA
Johnny Williams Trinity College, USA
Rai Wilson Hamilton County Public Defender, USA
  • ProQuest Social Science Plus Text
  • Manuscript Submissions

    The editors cordially invite you to submit your work for possible publication in Humanity & Society. The journal strives to publish strong theoretical and/or empirical contribution to humanist questions and issues that are sociological in nature. Research articles should conform to the latest edition of the American Sociological Association’s Style Guide, and may have a length of 10,000 words or less. Sections in a manuscript should include the following elements (in this order):

    (1) Title page
    (2) Abstract
    (3) Personal Reflexive Statement(s)
    (4) Text
    (5) Notes, if applicable
    (6) References
    (7) Tables, if applicable
    (8) Figures, if applicable
    (9) Appendices, if applicable.

    They must include (in this order): Title page, Abstract, Personal Reflexive Statement(s), and Text.

    1. Title page. Please include the following: (1) Full article title, (2) Acknowledgments and credits, (3) Each author’s complete name and institutional affiliation(s), (4) Grant numbers and/or funding information, and (5) Corresponding author (name, address, phone/fax, e-mail).

    2. Abstract. Print the abstract (150 to 200 words) on a separate page headed by the full article title.

    3. Personal Reflexive Statement. The Personal Reflexive Statement provides an account of the author’s perspectives about and personal commitment to the subject matter of the article. It is appropriate to include the author’s experiences as a social activist. Include a Personal Reflexive Statement for each author unless a single statement is appropriate. Print the Personal Reflexive Statement(s) (150 to 200 words) on the Abstract page directly below the Abstract.

    In addition to publishing articles, we also publish action notes (which describe activism the writer has participated in or observed) and provocative “final thoughts.” Action notes are “calls to action” based on your social observations or discussions around how to put theory into action. They are half of the length of research papers (approximately 5,000 words, including all materials) and will be peer-reviewed.

    At the end of each issue we hope to pique reader interest with a “Final Thought” Page. This may come in the form of a provocative image that carries a sociological or social change message, an interview with a sociologist talking about her/his craft, or even a cartoon analysis of our social world. We want these ventures to be provocative, humorous, even perplexing. Please submit your “Final Thought” along with a description and/or interpretation of it to explain how the image/idea presented is relevant to social life.

    All submissions should be made electronically at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/has. Please follow the instructions for creating an account. Then the system will walk you through a step-by-step process for manuscript submission.

    Please direct your inquiries and ideas to: Daina Cheyenne Harvey, Editor-In-Chief, at dharvey@holycross.edu and Emma Lesser, Managing Editor, at emma.lesser@uconn.edu.

     

    Book Review Submissions

    Humanity and Society (HaS) offers a book review section that aims to offer thoughtful summaries and appraisals of recently released books germane to humanist sociology. Reviewers are asked to keep the HaS mission in mind when reviewing. Humanist sociology is broadly defined as a sociology developed through rigorous and critical analyses of inequality, exploitation, and injustice while undergirded by an earnest commitment to generate knowledge that can be used to ameliorate social suffering. We are committed to a sociology that contributes to a more humane, equal, and just society and that invites diverse perspectives and forms of knowledge into the conversation.

    HaS has begun to review books in thematic bundles. This, we believe, will enhance the effectiveness of the reviews, as they can be situated in a collection of topically similar texts that deliver contrasting theoretical and empirical approaches. To this end, we encourage our reviewers to address not only how individual books contribute to their own specialized field of knowledge, but to think of the broader implications of the study and its insights for understanding the general process of stratification and social change.

    HaS generally does not publish unsolicited book reviews. However, we are always interested in being alerted to new books that speak to the humanist sociological tradition and to new people who wish to review those books! If you would like to suggest a book for review, please send the full bibliographic information about the book to the book review editor, Selina R. Gallo-Cruz at the address below. Also, if you would like to be considered as a book reviewer, please send a copy of curriculum vitae and a list of at least three general and three specific (no more than six) key subject areas in which you would be comfortable reviewing, to the book review editor. Please note that book reviews are limited to 750 words.

    Selina R. Gallo-Cruz
    Book Review Editor, Humanity and Society
    Department of Sociology and Anthropology
    College of the Holy Cross
    1 College Street
    Worcester, MA 01610
    sgallo@holycross.edu

    Multimedia Review Submissions

    Recognizing the multiple modalities of communication and how presentations enhance our sociological understanding of the complex realities of the 21st century, Humanity & Society announces the introduction of media reviews. We invite reviewers of sociological messages in photography, web-based art, websites, popular films and documentaries, radio broadcasts, and multimedia presentations. We also invite suggestions for media reviews.

    *Please note that book reviews should be sent to our book review editor, Matthew W. Hughey at matthew.hughey@uconn.edu. As a generalist sociology journal, Humanity & Society publishes media reviews on a wide variety of topics. We are particularly interested in media presentations that are relevant to humanist sociology. Humanist sociology is broadly defined as a sociology that views people not only as products of social forces but also as agents in their lives and the world. We are committed to a sociology that contributes to a more humane, equal, and just society.

    The journal welcomes reviewers from diverse backgrounds and with diverse perspectives, including activists, graduate students, and practitioners in fields other than sociology. Potential reviewers are also encouraged to contact the Media Editor, Bhoomi K. Thakore, with suggestions for reviews in their areas of interest and expertise.

    Agreement to prepare a review for Humanity & Society assumes that the reviewer has no substantial material or personal connection to the material or to the producer. Reviews in violation of this guideline will not be published.

    Written submissions should not exceed 1,000 words. Reviews should also include your:

    Name:
    Position:
    Media Outlet:
    Mailing Address:
    Email Address:
    & Titles and dates published, along with URLs for electronic and multimedia presentations.
    If you think any additional contextual information would be useful, please include it with your submission/review.

    To review for Humanity & Society, or to offer suggestions for reviews, please contact our Media Editor, Bhoomi K. Thakore, with a brief summary of your interest and prior reviewing experience at bhoomi.thakore@northwestern.edu.

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