Tag: CfP Scholarly journal
Call for Papers | “Sport Hospitality and Tourism ”, Special Issue of Case Studies in Sport Management. Call ends December 1, 2023
The scope of this special issue is broad, encompassing a wide range of topics that explore the intricate interplay between tourism, hospitality, and the sport industry. We encourage submissions that shed light on diverse sport-related contexts and scenarios, spanning professional, amateur, and youth sports, as well as non-traditional sports like extreme or adventure sports. Case studies may also delve into various sports governing bodies, associations, leagues, sport media, and individual/team sports contexts.
Call for Papers | “Race, Gender, and the Queering/ Querying of Sporting Cultures”, Special Issue of Women’s Studies International Forum | Call ends March 1, 2024
We are pleased to welcome submissions of essays, poetry, short fiction, activist statements, manifestos, notes from the field, and artwork that examine issues relating to a wide range of movement cultures among differently positioned womyn of color and, also, represent a significant contribution to the fields of feminist, queer, critical studies of race, transnationalism, and interdisciplinary Women’s and Gender Studies.
Call for Papers | “Sports and the Limits of the Binary: Trans and Nonbinary Athletes and Equity in Sport” | Special Issue of Sociology of Sport Journal. Call...
In this special issue, we seek to interrogate the current sociopolitical moment on questions of gender inclusivity in sport (including physical activity, physical play, physical cultures, and other embodied practices) particularly relating to questions around sex/gender/sexuality binaries, colonial/racist legacies, and scientism. We welcome papers addressing multiple levels of sport (i.e., youth, interscholastic, recreational, club, collegiate, semi-professional, and professional) and scholarship from across the globe.
Call for Papers | “Exploring the future of leisure experiences within the metaverse”, special issue of World Leisure Journal | Call ends October 27, 2023
In this special issue we want to build upon work that has focused on exploring the boundaries of leisure and innovation. To adapt to future consumer expectations, significant transformational impacts are likely to occur in the fields of marketing, tourism, leisure, events, hospitality, citizen/government interaction, health, workplace, education, and social networks We are interested in receiving papers that explore and examine the numerous challenges that remain.
Call for Papers | “Unstructured entanglements of human leisure and non-human animal life”, Special Issue of World Leisure Journal. Call ends July 31, 2023
In multifarious non-structured ways, human leisure entangles with animal life without any pre-design or mediation. These entanglements create outcomes that may be welcomed or not, beneficial or not, dangerous or not, divisive or not, for all participants, both animal and human. We invite papers, therefore, for a special issue of the World Leisure Journal that focuses on the unstructured entanglements of animals and human leisure.
Call for Papers | “Sports and the Limits of the Binary: Trans and Nonbinary Athletes and Equity in Sport”, Special Issue of the Sociology of Sport Journal | Call...
In this special issue, we seek to interrogate the current sociopolitical moment on questions of gender inclusivity in sport (including physical activity, physical play, physical cultures, and other embodied practices) particularly relating to questions around sex/gender/sexuality binaries, colonial/racist legacies, and scientism. We welcome papers addressing multiple levels of sport (i.e., youth, interscholastic, recreational, club, collegiate, semi-professional, and professional) and scholarship from across the globe, especially submissions written within and focusing upon the Global South.
Call for Papers | “Technology Enabled Competitiveness and Experiences in Events”, Special Issue of Event Management Journal | Full Paper Submission Deadline: Sunday, March 16, 2024.
This special issue welcomes theoretical, empirical, experimental, and case study research contributions. These contributions should clearly address the theoretical and practical implications of the research in reference. Both conceptual and empirical work are welcome. The event-related technology enabled competitiveness and experiences can be viewed under a variety of prisms.
Call for Papers | “Environmental Sustainability and the Olympic Games”, Special Issue of Journal of Olympic Studies | Call ends August 31, 2023
This special issue seeks to explore such complexities and environmental issues surrounding the Games. We welcome theoretical, empirical, and conceptual submissions from a broad range of disciplines (history, sociology, anthropology, environmental studies, philosophy). While broad, we hope this special issue will capture the array of connections between climate change, physical culture, and the Olympics.
Call for Papers | “Nature Sport and Environmental History: Adulation or Alteration of Nature?”, special Issue of Sport History Review. Call ends April 1, 2023
With the exploits of early sports practitioners and adventurers, the tourist development of certain sports sites led to urbanization or gentrification, which poses other environmental preservation and social concerns. Relationships with the “natural” world are shaped by cultures and this special issue invites reflection on how nature sport has been a medium for such expressions and contestations.
Call for Papers | Frontiers Research Topic: “The Politics of Sport and the Climate Crisis”. Call ends June 30, 2023
The goal of this research topic is to illuminate and further advance scientific understandings of these political debates (and others related to sport and the climate crisis). It seeks to unpack the geographical, cultural, sociological and/or organizational contexts in which these debates occur, the stakeholders involved, the issues at stake (money, prestige, control, brands, etc.) and the implications of these debates for moving sport closer to addressing the climate crisis.













