The inaugural SAGE Social Justice Book Award has been awarded to Bennie Kara, author of A Little Guide for Teachers: Diversity in Schools. Authors Anamik Saha and Prospera Tedam have been named as runners up.
Read MoreLGBTQIA+ History Month is here. To acknowledge this, we have curated a list of important books and articles, which are now free to access, as a starting point to the discussion, and encourage you to read, share and learn from this content.
Read MoreBlack History Month — February in the U.S. — provides an opportunity to both celebrate the Black community’s past contributions and consider the issues and obstacles to equity of today and tomorrow. Research and scholarship is a vital component of this work and is instrumental to creating policies, practices, and procedures that improve lives.
Read MoreAs part of SAGE’s mission of building bridges to knowledge and commitment to fostering a more inclusive and diverse publishing community, SAGE Journals is adding Plain Language Summaries (PLS), or nontechnical abstracts, as an option authors can add to their articles for select journals participating in the pilot. The summaries will appear wherever abstracts are available (just below the abstract) and are open to all readers. As an initial priority, SAGE’s goal is to add the PLS function to a limited trial of journals that highlight research representing oppressed, marginalized or otherwise silenced communities.
Read MoreWomen’s Health (WHE) is an Open Access journal that publishes multidisciplinary research concerning a woman’s lifespan. The editors welcome health studies regarding races, ethnicities, and genders that have been left out of past medical research.
Read MoreA new special issue in Security Dialogue [LINK] focuses on race and racism in critical security studies. The forum presents diverse contributions to scholarly debates around racism, antiracism and the historical structures of meaning in the field of international relations, security studies, critical security studies, and securitization theory.
Read MoreThis year’s theme highlights the recently released UNESCO Recommendation on Open Science, a call for equitable participation of all producers and consumers of knowledge, of which Open Access is a crucial component. The recommendation, based on recent discussions between the 193 member countries of UNESCO, focuses on the importance of diverse practices, workflows, languages, research topics and research outputs, to fulfil the needs of diverse research communities and to ensure a future of scholarship that is accessible to all.
Read MoreThe Journal of Black Studies (JBS), founded by Afrocentricity scholars Dr. Molefi Kete Asante and Dr. Robert Singleton, is the first journal of its kind to publish interdisciplinary research on the Black American experience. For decades, each JBS article has worked to displace Eurocentric systems of thought and instead emphasize Afrocentric and Pan-African research practices.
Read MoreThe idea of the Journal of Black Studies (JBS) was born in 1968 when a young academic named Molefi Kete Asante approached SAGE founder Sara Miller McCune with an idea for a journal that would respond to the Black studies movement as well as a public call for equality, justice, and nonviolence. At the time there was no comparable journal, and Sara saw this journal as a vital addition to social science scholarship. The first full volume was completed in 1971. (Read the full history of the journal at Social Science Space.)
50 years later, JBS continues to publish research that shapes not only the academic field, but ultimately lived experiences as it provides dynamic and creative analyses of many aspects of the Black experience.
“With the publication of JBS in September 1970, the academy and the field of social sciences had opened a new door into the lived experiences of Africans in America and indeed throughout the African diaspora,” commented Dr. Asante. “This was not to be a field defined simply by the discipline of history but we sought to sustain a ‘full analytical treatment’ of African people.”
We’re celebrating the anniversary with free-to-read JBS articles, a podcast, and video messages, and through the endowment of a new scholarship – the SAGE Asante Award – at Temple University.
Read MoreThe SAGE Encyclopedia of Trans Studies features more than 300 entries covering a wide range of topics and concepts including the criminal justice system, activism, mental health, the trans pride flag, and key historical events, figures and organizations.
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