Call for Papers: Volume 2, Issue 2 (April 2026)

2026-02-24
Reconfiguring Culture, Power, and Knowledge in an Era of Planetary Uncertainty

Global Review of Humanities, Arts and Society (GRHAS) invites submissions for Volume 2, Issue 2 (April 2026).

The early twenty-first century has been marked by overlapping transformations: climate instability, geopolitical fragmentation, accelerated digitalization, intensified migration, and growing contestations over knowledge production. These conditions call for renewed theoretical reflection and methodologically grounded inquiry across the humanities, arts, and social sciences.

This issue seeks contributions that critically examine how culture, power, mobility, representation, and epistemic authority are being reconfigured in contemporary global contexts. We particularly welcome submissions that combine conceptual innovation with empirical depth and that engage comparative, transnational, or Global South perspectives.

  Areas of Interest (including but not limited to)
  • Climate change and environmental humanities

  • Migration, borders, and transnational formations

  • Digital culture, algorithmic governance, and technological critique

  • Postcolonial and decolonial theory

  • Social justice, activism, and human rights discourse

  • Memory politics, public history, and cultural remembrance

  • Narrative theory, translation, and cross-cultural dialogue

  • Critical art practices and performance studies

  • Epistemologies and critiques of knowledge production

  Submission Categories

GRHAS welcomes submissions in the following categories:

  • Original Articles (OA)

  • Theoretical Explorations (TE)

  • Case Studies (CS)

  • Methods & Tools (MT)

  • Art Practices & Reflections (AP)

Research-based submissions are subject to double-blind peer review.

  Important Dates

Submission Deadline: March 15, 2026
Scheduled Publication: April 2026

Manuscripts must be written in English and prepared in accordance with the journal’s submission guidelines. Submissions should demonstrate theoretical rigor, methodological clarity, and a substantive contribution to international scholarly dialogue.