Protest (Protest)
Journal Descriptions
A “protest turn” is upon us. The Arab Spring uprisings, Occupy Wall Street, anti-immigrant mobilization, and Black Lives Matter – all speak to this historical juncture. Against this backdrop, Protest inaugurates a forum for capturing this expanding global phenomenon of contentious politics. To this end, it invites contributors to interpret the evolving nature of power and power dynamics and relations across various terrains of protest. Protest is neither single nor fixed, and the journal champions the diversity of ontology, epistemology, and methodology of knowing protest, undertaking to reflect it in the “writing” of protest. This dimension is intended to elicit new openings for inquiring more widely and globally into the protest turn. The journal aims to: • Parse the complexities of protest as they play out across time and space. • Chart anti-systemic struggles by the indignants of the world – the faces of marginalization – in their bid to strike back at structures, forces, discourses, and relations of power. • Understand emerging constructions and re-constructions of identity and peoplehood as well as negotiation of distribution and representation of power. • Offer a platform that brings academic practitioners and activists in the field into conversation with one another. • Narrativize the normative dimensions of protest as emancipatory activisms in pursuit of social justice and race, gender, environmental, and socio-economic rights, equality, and protections, etc.
Protest (Protest) is :-
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International, Peer-Reviewed, Open Access, Refereed, Political Science, Sociology, Social Movements, Human Rights, Race and Gender Studies, Environmental Studies, Social Justice , Online or Print , Bi-Annual Journal
- UGC Approved, ISSN Approved: P-ISSN P-ISSN: 2667-3711, E-ISSN: 2667-372X, Established: 2021,
- Does Not Provide Crossref DOI
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Not indexed in Scopus, WoS, DOAJ, PubMed, UGC CARE