Hello everyone:
Pamela Moss has completed her five-year term as lead editor for ACME: An International e-jounrl for Critical Geographies. We would like to thank Pamela for her hard work and keen intellectual input to the journal over the last five years. Pamela remains
with the journal in the capacity of 'Past Editor' and board member.
As a result of Pamela's departure and as part of our desire to serve a more international audience (ACME now accepts and publishes manuscripts in English, French, German, Italian and Spanish), there is a new team of editors at ACME:
Harald Bauder
Department of Geography, University of Guelph, Canada
(also responsible for manuscripts submitted in German)
Lawrence D. Berg
Barber School of Arts & Sciences, University of British Columbia, Canada
David Butz
Department of Geography, Brock University, Canada
Caroline Desbiens
Department de géographie, Université Laval, Canada
(responsible for manuscripts submitted in French)
Salvatore Engel-Di Mauro
Department of Geography and Geology, University of Wisconsin - Stevens Point, USA
(also responsible for manuscripts submitted in Italian)
Sara González Ceballos
School of Architecture, Landscape and Planning, Université of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK
(responsible for manuscripts submitted in Spanish)
Rachel Pain
Department of Geography, University of Durham, UK
Past Editor:
Pamela Moss, Studies in Policy & Practice, Faculty of Human and Social Development, University of Victoria, Canada
ACME will be publishing the final articles in volume 3 soon, and we have a number of special issues and thematic sections in production for volume 4. ACME is available free online at: <http://www.acme-journal.org>.
ACME is an on-line international journal for critical and radical analyses of the social, the spatial and the political. The journal's purpose is to provide a forum for the publication of critical and radical work about space in the social sciences -
including anarchist, anti-racist, environmentalist, feminist, marxist, postcolonial, poststructuralist, queer, situationist and socialist perspectives. Analyses that are critical and radical are understood to be part of the praxis of social and political
change aimed at challenging, dismantling, and transforming prevalent relations, systems, and structures of capitalist exploitation, oppression, imperialism, neo-liberalism, national aggression, and environmental destruction.
--
Lawrence D. Berg, D.Phil.
Canada Research Chair in Human Rights, Diversity and Identity
Irving K. Barber School of Arts & Sciences
University of British Columbia
3333 University Way
Kelowna, BC, Canada, V1V 1V7
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Editor
The Canadian Geographer / Le Géographe canadien
Editor
ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies
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