CFP--Colorado Critical Review--Abstracts Due April 15th

full name / name of organization: 
Colorado Critical Review--Hosted at the University of Colorado Denver

www.ColoradoCriticalReview.com

Call for Submissions, Inaugural Issue 1.1

Abstracts due (250 word max): April 15, 2016.
Invitations to submit will be sent out by: April 30, 2016.
Completed submissions due: June 30, 2016.
Abstract submissions at: http://www.coloradocriticalreview.com/submit/

We are pleased to announce that the Colorado Critical Review (CCR) is currently seeking submissions for its inaugural issue. CCR's hybrid format seeks to create a dialogue between emerging and established scholars by offering a chance to submit both traditional refereed articles, essays, book reviews and other works, as well as to solicit critical responses to a featured article from a renowned scholar.

We seek a broad range of submissions from social, spatial, digital, liberal, policy and economic perspectives, including (but certainly not limited to): political science, urban planning, history, geography, philosophy, architecture, religious studies, landscape architecture, criminology, communication, women's and gender studies, international studies, environmental studies, cultural studies, visual studies, digital media, economics, public affairs and critical theory.

Submission Formats:

Traditional Submissions: Firmly centered on the importance of critique, advocacy, and the forwarding of alternatives, CCR seeks to publish a comprehensive and diverse body of work that supports these ideals. We seek a broad range of submissions in a variety of formats and approaches—scholarly articles, essays, interviews, designs, art, poetry, multimedia and other works—that encourage and codify interdisciplinarity through incisiveness analysis, ingenuity and integration.

Critical Responses: With great excitement, we are pleased to announce that the inaugural issue of CCR will include a frontispiece article by Dr. Timothy W. Luke, Distinguished Professor of Political Science at Virginia Tech, entitled "Sustainabilization: A Critique of Green Economy(s)" [attached]. We are looking for response essays, from a broad range of disciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives, that respond, critique, and work to develop new insights into Dr. Luke's compelling arguments. Please download Dr. Luke's article at: http://www.coloradocriticalreview.com/submit/

Submission Guidelines:
Scholarly Articles (5000 words or less)
Critical Response Essays (1500-3000 words)
Book Reviews (1000 words or less)
Interviews & Creative (open)

An invitation to submit is not a promise to publish. All full works will be peer reviewed, and revisions may be requested before publication.

University of Colorado Denver
Hosted by the Master of Humanities/Master of Social Science (MHMSS) Program