Economic Inequality
Editors-in-Chief:
Rajendra Baikady Ph.D., Department of Social Work, School of Humanities, University of Johannesburg, South Africa
Email: rajendra.baikady@mail.huji.ac.il
Jaroslaw Przeperski Ph.D. Director, Centre for Family Research, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Torun, Poland
Email: jarek.przeperski@gmail.com
Berch Berberoglu, Ph.D., Foundation Professor of Sociology, Department of Sociology, University of Nevada, United States.
Email: berchb@unr.edu
Dear colleagues we invite you to take part in one of the largest editorial projects on Inequality - Mapping Global Inequality - Major Reference Work Book Series being published by Springer Nature, United States.
The
Series encompasses several volumes, but we will publish an individual
call for contributions to each volume separately. In this call for
contributions, we are particularly seeking authors for the volume on Economic Inequality
This
volume in the mapping global inequality series aims to provide an
understanding and tools to measure, describe, monitor, evaluate, and
analyze economic inequality within different political, economic,
cultural and geographic boundaries. While exploring different aspects of
economic inequality we aim to understand the connection between
Globalization, Neoliberal Policies and Economic Inequality across the
globe. The process of globalization and technological advancement in the
21st century resulted in unequal distribution of wealth and
economic resources between and within different countries and thus
leaving a huge number of people experiencing discrimination and unequal
treatment. Unequal distribution of economic resources brings inequality
and disparities between and within the countries, communities and
different population groups which further leads to several social
problems. Economic inequality is a concern in almost all countries
around the world and often people are trapped in poverty with little
chance to climb up the social ladder as they experience lack of
resources and opportunities. This volume invites contributions
approaching economic inequality at different levels of global society
(whether local, regional, national, or transnational) --the micro, meso,
and macro.
The volume is multidisciplinary in its approach and encourages scholars to respond to the following four questions:
- What do we know about economic inequality (i.e., what is the definition and perception of inequality)?
- Why
is economic inequality still existing in the country and what are the
consequences (i.e., root causes from micro, meso or macro level)?
- What are the current trends in economic inequality?
Chapters in this volume will explore how economic resources such as land,
labor, capital, and technology are unequally distributed among
different population groups and its impact on the overall human
development. Further, this will also focus on how economic inequality
experienced in a country will affect its progress towards achieving
different Sustainable Development Goals. We invite chapters that
examine:
(i) anatomy of economic inequality ; (ii) globalization, labor
market and economic inequality; (iii)
patterns of globalization, regionalization and their consequences on
economic development (iv) analytical and normative responses to
globalization; (v) agriculture and economic development in developed
countries; (vi) measuring economic inequality; (vii) the influence of
the urban informal sector on economic inequality; (viii) identifying and
measuring economic discrimination; (ix) role of higher education to
reduce inequality in developing countries; (x) skill development and
economic development; (xi) trade, foreign investment, and economic
inequality in developing countries; (xii) progressive social security
programs; (xiii) entrepreneurship, jobs, and economic growth; (xiv) role
of policymakers in reducing economic inequality; (xv) technological
development, digital transformation, big data, and the future of
economic development.
The
goal is to gather the best possible contributions in the respective
areas and make this reference work as a truly global project. There will
be a minimum of 40 chapters from at least 30 countries in this and each
volume discussing various aspects of inequality in different
socio-political and economic contexts providing a valuable source for
researchers, academics and policy makers at both local and global
contexts. Each of the Mapping Global Inequality volumes will also
include chapters on cross-country comparison to provide an understanding
of similarities and differences in many aspects of inequality across
different regions. Additionally, an exclusive and extensive
introductory chapter with an overview of the volume, its scope and
comparative understanding of all the contributions will be covered in
this and all the other volumes.
Structure of the Volume:
Level of Your Contribution:
Our aim is to provide an accessible and exciting handbook for
specialists, academicians, advanced students, and readers who are
familiar with the field as well as those from other related disciplines.
The size of each chapter that we are expecting will be circa 8000-10,000 words (including the reference list). We are inviting chapters that are critical summaries/synopses (tertiary literature) rather than original research reports.
We
are accepting contributions on a rolling basis and writing and
reviewing is scheduled to take place until approximately July 2024 and
final proofing between then and the end of the year. The sooner you
submit your chapter the sooner it will be published online and citable.
Contributions to all the volumes in this series are peer-reviewed.
Online-First Publication of Chapters:
Once the production and proofing loop is completed, the chapter will be
published online-first on Springer Nature's online publication webpage
SpringerLink http://link.springer.com.
At that stage, the article is DOI citable. You will be able to access
it via your chapter page on METEOR. As the author of this project, you
can also access via METEOR all other online published Springer Nature
References.
Please keep in mind: the sooner you send in your manuscript, the sooner it will be published and citable.
Print Publication:
The print publication of the volume you contribute to will be finalized
once the last chapter of the volume has been reviewed and gone through
the production workflow.
Online Update of Chapters: One
copy of the published version of your chapter is re-ingested to METEOR
for further updates. The chapter opens up for updates again in METEOR
and the status of your chapter changes to ‘Open for Submission’. At this
time, you can up-load fresh or updated files, if you wish. The updated
and approved chapters will be published as a new version in the living
reference version of this project. Editors and authors can submit
updates to articles at the pace of the advancement of science. On
behalf of the Editors of Palgrave/Springer Nature, we thank you for your
contributions. Please don't hesitate to contact us with any queries you
might have.
Interested authors, please send a 250-word abstract and author bio By 25 March 2022, to Dr. Rajendra Baikady rajendra.baikady@mail.huji.ac.il. Please give the subject header as - Economic Inequality: Chapter proposal.
The editorial team members will evaluate the submitted abstracts on a
rolling basis and notify the authors along with full chapter submission
guidelines.
Qualifications:
We recommend that academic authors have, be supervised by, or in
pursuit of their Ph.D., whereas non-academic professionals should have
at least 3 years of experience in the field.
Full chapter submission Schedule:
December 25, 2022 | June 25, 2023 |
December 25, 2023 | June 25, 2024 |