Fwd: 2021 Tufts Hemispheres Journal of International Affairs: Coping with Crises- Call for Submissions

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Econ Undergrad

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Dec 17, 2020, 3:44:00 PM12/17/20
to ART Economics - Publicity
To Whom it May Concern,

Hello, this is Haruka Noishiki, Editor-in-Chief of Hemispheres: The Tufts Undergraduate Journal of International Affairs. We are a student-run academic journal that publishes outstanding research papers and photographs by undergraduates in the field of International Relations, and are currently seeking submissions for our 44th edition on the theme of Coping with Crises.

 

We have attached a flyer, which you can attach in an email or hang up on campus. If you have any questions or are interested in advertising with us, please contact us via email. We greatly appreciate your help in continuing to promote excellence in undergraduate international relations scholarship.


We hope that you can help us to continue publishing some of the top undergraduate research in the country and around the world by forwarding the following information to your students or various professors in your department via elist and/or lists:


Hemispheres: The Tufts Journal of International Affairs


Hemispheres, The Tufts Undergraduate Journal of International Affairs, one of the oldest undergraduate journals in the field, is now accepting submissions relating to this year’s theme of Coping with Crises. Submissions should be research articles, approx. 5000-8000 words, written by undergraduates in a broad range of fields relevant to international affairs. To view paper requirements and guidelines, please visit this link. To submit a paper, or if you have any questions or concerns, please contact tuftshem...@gmail.com.


Submission Deadline: January 25th, 2021.


We welcome and encourage a broad interpretation of the theme. Potential research topics may include, but are not limited to:


Coronavirus response, equality, disinformation, recession, Black Lives Matter, regional/emerging conflicts, cybersecurity, climate change, police brutality, gender issues, revisionist powers, social movements, elections, contested elections, bureaucratic response/mismanagement, technological development, refugees, mass/large sale migration, globalization, freedom of speech, authoritarianism, corruption, ethnic cleansing, nuclear proliferation, and more.


Sincerely,


Haruka Noishiki

Editor-in-Chief

Tufts Hemispheres 

tuftshem...@gmail.com




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