
Regional Science Policy & Practice (RSPP)
CALL for Special Issue: UKRAINE: GEOPOLITICAL REALITIES AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVES
Guest editors:
Gabriela Carmen Pascariu, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi, Romania; This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Oksana Holovko-Havrysheva, Ivan Franko National University, Ukraine; This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Oksana Krayevska, Ivan Franko National University, Ukraine; This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES:
Ukraine became independent in 1991 after the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Like any country in the post-Soviet area it started to develop its own foreign policy, to conduct structural reforms to foster its economic development and it transformed to the key actor for ensuring internationally security, stability and prosperity. After the Euromaidan (2013) and the Revolution of Dignity (2013-2014), Ukrainian society clearly defined the main directions of its foreign policy leading to the incorporation of the European aspirations in the Constitution of Ukraine in 2019. However, independence of Ukraine became challenged by internal difficulties in reforming its political, economic and legal systems and external threats.
By addressing the internal developments in the country and external policies towards it by other international actors from an inter/multi/transdisciplinary perspective, this special issue addresses the new political, economic and societal transformations in Ukraine aimed at increasing stability, security and sustainable development inside the country, on the European continent and worldwide. Ukraine is trying to overcome different challenges caused by the geopolitical situation, geographical position and economic development, which cause many difficulties for achieving positive outcomes in economic and societal transformation processes internally and externally, especially in the cooperation with neighbouring countries. However, these challenges create new opportunity windows for deep and comprehensive internal transformations leading to the modernisation of all spheres of socio-economic and political life. These new opportunities cover such areas, but are not limited to good governance, strengthening democracy and capacities of political institutions, supporting regional development, ensuring resilience while reaching the sustainable development goals.
It aims, therefore, to bring together papers on theoretical and empirical research results on Ukraine from the multidisciplinary perspectives of economy, governance, institutions, culture/identity/history, international relations, European integration, human security, political science, society and democracy, or environmental issues and how to connect them with the sustainable development and regional development.
Below are some examples of topics relevant for the special issue on Ukraine: geopolitical realities and regional development perspectives:
By this special issue, we intend to contribute to a better understanding of geopolitical realities and regional development perspectives of Ukraine, focussing on processes, activities, linkages with the various actors and policies with high relevance for evidence-based policymaking.
NOTICE:
All submissions will undergo the double blind peer review process that is generally applied for the journal. To submit a manuscript, you will register and submit your paper online at: https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/rspp. When making your submission, you have to indicate at the cover letter that is for the Special Issue entitled “Ukraine: geopolitical realities and regional development perspectives”.
SELECTED REFERENCES:
Workshop on “Chinese Migration, Diaspora and Mobility”
Pembroke College, Cambridge, 20 April 2022 (9am - 5pm)
China is currently experiencing a rapid and dramatic urbanisation process, with significant population movements between rural, semi-rural and urban areas, between large metropolitan areas, and to and from other countries. These migratory movements have in turn influenced institutional reforms, urban housing, and labour markets in China, and generated social dynamics. Sometimes heightened by policy changes and social constraints. International movements of students and workers, and a growing Chinese diaspora abroad, have also resulted in social, economic, and cultural changes both at home and within the diaspora.
The aim of the workshop is to highlight new research on the topic of human mobility within and to and from China, including the drivers of migration, outcomes for migrants and non-migrants, inequalities arising from migration processes, and the impact of migration on housing, labour markets, access to services and welfare, education, and crime, as well as economic growth in both urban and rural areas. Of particular interest are papers using innovative qualitative or quantitative research methods, new data sets, comparative case studies, and those discussing policy experimentation at the national, regional or city scale.
The workshop will take place in a hybrid format, with in-person presentations in Cambridge, and the possibility to join in with the discussion remotely via Zoom. There is no fee for attending the workshop, and meals and refreshments will be provided. There are also travel and accommodation bursaries available for presenters.
Authors are invited to submit an abstract by 18 February 2022 using this link: https://forms.gle/acdTwhhCMTaHh7hw8
Presenters and attendees will receive notification of acceptance by 1 March 2022. There will be a prize for the best presentation, awarded at the end of the workshop.
The workshop will also tie in with a special issue on the same topic by the academic journal Regional Science Policy and Practice (RSPP), and presenters and attendees will have the opportunity to publish a paper in the special issue (subject to the usual peer review process).
Workshop organisers:
Sponsors:
More information at: https://workshopcambridge.weebly.com/
Graduate students enrolled in Ph.D. programs in North America are encouraged to apply for the Twenty-First Benjamin H. Stevens Graduate Fellowship in Regional Science, administered by the North American Regional Science Council of the Regional Science Association International (NARSC-RSAI).
https://www.narsc.org/newsite/awards-prizes/stevens-graduate-fellowship/applications/
Dear NECTAR colleagues,
Due to the travel restrictions and general uncertainty related to covid-19, the organizers of the workshop "Smart Transport for Sustainable Tourism" have decided to postpone it to September 12-14 (Évora, Portugal).
See the new call attached.
Best regards
--
Ana Condeço-Melhorado
NECTAR Secretary

Call for Papers and Special Session Proposals
The APDR invite regional scientists, economists, economic geographers, urban planners, policy makers, and researchers of related disciplines to participate in the 29th APDR Congress with the theme "Islands and peripheral territories: challenges in a moving geography and changing "climate" patterns" that will be held from 29 to 30 of June, 2022, at University of Madeira (Colégio dos Jesuítas), Funchal, Madeira.
Islands economies (and peripheral areas in general) have been coping with a number of challenging issues, notably the overdependence on a few key sectors such as the tourism industry and an oversized and over subsidized public administration sector. To a certain extent, islands economies can be considered as a success story, because they succeed in defined the parameters of the overall image and political discourse being conveyed abroad by the local government and ONG at the international fora. However, the current trends in terms of climate change, natural disasters, and reduced mobility, change of the epicentre of the global economy from the North Hemisphere to the Pacific Basin and anti-globalization voices put the current narrative under pressure. A new paradigm is needed to provide a new understanding to the challenges faced by such regions. The overall aim of this conference is to bring ideas, theoretical approaches and examples of potential solutions.
The call for papers and Special Session Proposals are open and your participation is very welcome!
Regular Sessions:
Deadline for Special Session proposals: March 13, 2022. Proposals should be sent by email to the secretariat of the Congress (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).
Deadline for Abstracts submissions: May 8, 2022. Authors should submit their abstracts through online submission system by following the link https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/APDR2022.
All information at the congress website: http://www.apdr.pt/congresso/2022
Looking forward to meeting you in Funchal!
The Organizing Committee and the Board of APDR 29th APDR Congress
Regional Science Policy & Practice (RSPP)
Call for papers for RSPP Special Issue on Pathbreaking trajectories: Socio-economic and Institutional de-peripheralization of marginal areas
In recent decades, economic and political inequalities between different macro-areas of the world have increased. Moreover, spatial inequalities within macro-areas have also grown. In this scenario, the relations between economy-politics-society at the local level have become more kaleidoscopic and entropic than in the second half of 20th Century.
Against this background, new scholarly and policy attention has been devoted to peripheral, marginal, or ‘left-behind’ areas, i.e., those territories in which the economy is struggling, institutions are producing vicious lock-in type cycles, social elites are strengthening themselves through extractive and appropriative orientations towards public goods, and de-anthropization and depopulation are growing. At the same time, it becomes urgent to investigate further the reverse processes, i.e., under what circumstances peripheral areas can extract themselves – at least partly – from their marginality.
The time is, indeed, ripe to solicit a comprehensive and in-depth international examination of a counterintuitive and unexpected puzzle: what are the economic, social and institutional mechanisms that make it possible for peripheral areas to regain centrality and vitality unexpectedly, even in a short time span?
This special issue aims to collect contributions concerning these unexpected phenomena of pathbreaking trajectories that is the economic and institutional de-peripheralization of marginal areas. To this end, we intend to bring together scientific contributions from interconnected research fields mainly related to geography, sociology, political science and public policy, political economy, and anthropology – shedding new light on the processes that the de-peripheralization of marginal areas rely upon. This reasoning is based on a general assumption according to which simple geographic features do not determine per se socio-spatial divisions and peripheralization. Peripheral areas are not natural; they emerge as a result of (not neutral) processes that imply hierarchical and power relationships. This has been emerging in a contradictory scenario. The world is increasingly global, but balkanized nonetheless; suffice it to say that new fractures between Northern and Southern Europe have occurred, intersecting with those between East and West Europe; North America-Central America; Rural and urban China, etc.
In other words, peripheral spaces are produced; they can be the outcomes of more or less intentional construction processes pertaining to institutional and political assets, relational patterns and social norms, and the unequal allocation of economic resources. It therefore becomes essential to observe how and if multidimensional socio-economic changes may occur within peripheral areas deconstructing their marginality. In the literature, the attempt of demarginalization of peripheral areas have been often analyzed with respect to top-down initiatives; that is initiatives coming from political center(s) and directed towards peripheries (i.e., development aid programs, exogenous investments, national and international cooperation to support disadvantaged places, etc.). By contrast, this Special Issue intends to systematize and promote those studies that assume an internal point of view to peripheral areas, focusing on autonomous dynamics that are mainly endogenous to those contexts.
Strictly speaking, we invite papers including, but not limited to, contributions on the following aspects:
We invite papers from a range of perspectives, different disciplines, and from around the world. Contributions combining empirical investigations well framed in clear conceptual frameworks are well- suited for the Special Issue. Comparative papers suggesting some policy orientations will be also highly appreciated.
Authors are invited to submit an abstract by the 15th of April 2022 to Luca Storti (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.), Giulia Urso (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.) and Neil Reid (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.). Abstracts should be between 250 and 500 words in length. We will inform everyone on or around May 1, 2022, as to whether their abstract has been accepted for the special issue. Full papers are expected by 1st December 2022, and publication expected in fall 2023, following the peer review process.
to: https://rsaiconnect.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/17577802, at the submission add in the cover letter that is for the Special Issue on: Pathbreaking trajectories: Socio-economic and Institutional de-peripheralization of marginal areas
Join us for the 61st Annual Meeting of the Southern Regional Science Association at the Sheraton Austin Hotel at the Capitol April 7-9, 2022
Submit Individual Abstracts and Organized Sessions by February 1st at www.srsa.org
Upcoming Deadlines
Early Bird Registration Discount: February 1st
Moriarty Graduate Student Paper Award: February 15th
William H. Miernyk Research Excellence Medal: February 24th
Additional information can be found at 2022 SRSA Conference Website
Dear RSAI members,
I hope this email finds you well.
The new year starts with yet another initiative from the Association, promoted by its President, Prof. Eduardo Haddad. The RSAI is happy to announce the first edition of the RSAI Film Festival!
If you are a Regional Science enthusiast, join the “Space Odyssey International Film Festival” and share your passion to our discipline. You can choose one of the four awards categories to address for a wide audience of non-specialists different aspects of Regional Science:
My research in Regional Science: Let us learn about your research! You could focus on the results of a specific paper, your thesis or dissertation, or even an ongoing research project or idea. Why not telling us about your preferred method and how you use it to understand regional science topics? It is your call!
What is Regional Science?: Can you answer this question by explaining to a broader audience what Regional Science is about? Or do you prefer addressing it to an initiated community? In any case, there are many people eager to learn what we do. Let them know!
Regional Science applications in the Global South: Spatial, interregional, and regional analytic approaches can be used and, if necessary, adapted, to realize much more probing attacks on regional and spatial problems in the developing world. Can you share specific case studies and/or applications of Regional Science methods to countries/regions in the Global South?
Regional Science sections and centers around the globe: Are you a proud member of a national section? Are you part of a research group engaged in the field of Regional Science? Why don’t you share the information about your section or research center? We bet many people in our community would benefit from that!
Check the rules of the Space Odyssey here.
We look forward to watching your movies soon,
Kind regards,
It is a pleasure to inform you that the issue n. 60 (January 2022) of our journal (Revista Portuguesa de Estudos Regionais / Portuguese Review of Regional Studies) is now available online. I also want to inform you that the journal has now a new website.
You can accede to the issue and the new website using the following link:
https://www.review-rper.com/index.php/rper/issue/view/60
As we can check, this issue is entirely devoted to the Pandemic CONVID-19 Impacts and has as Guest-Editors María de la Cruz del Río Rama, José Álvarez García and Amador Durán Sánchez, from two universities in Spain.
Thank you for contributing to the success of the journal. We will go on counting on you!
Best regards,
J. Cadima Ribeiro
Editor-in-Chief of RPER
We are pleased to inform you that a new issue of the Regional Statistics has been released and now it’s avaiable online.
https://www.ksh.hu/terstat_eng_current_issue
REGIONAL STATISTICS, 2022, VOL 12, No 1.
STUDIES
Judit Kapas: Has COVID-19 caused a change in the dynamics of the unemployment rate? The case of North America and continental Europe
https://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2022/2022_01/rs120107.pdf
Katalin Antalóczy – Imre Birizdó – Magdolna Sass: Local investment promotion in a Hungarian medium-sized town and the implications of the COVID pandemic
https://www.ksh.hu/docs/hun/xftp/terstat/2021/rs120104.pdf
Evelyn Calispa Aguilar: Regional systems of entrepreneurship in 2017–2018: An empirical study in selected regions of South America
https://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2022/2022_01/rs120103.pdf
Loránt Pregi – Ladislav Novotný: Impact of migration and natural reproduction on the development of the Slovak–Hungarian ethnic boundary in eastern Slovakia, 1991–2018
https://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2022/2022_01/rs120102.pdf
Kostas Rontos –Michail Papazoglou – Maria-Eleni Syrmali – Adele Sateriano: Towards the eastern gate to Europe: Factors shaping perceptions and attitudes towards migrants in Lesvos Island (Greece), 2016
https://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2022/2022_01/rs120105.pdf
Dávid Sümeghy: Halo effect of diversification and polarization, and the role of relative deprivation based on the 2018 Swedish parliamentary elections results
https://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2022/2022_01/rs120106.pdf
Ngo Thai Hung: Return equicorrelation and dynamic spillovers between Central and Eastern European, and World*1stock markets, 2010–2019
https://www.ksh.hu/docs/hun/xftp/terstat/2021/rs120108.pdf
Mohammad M. Jaber: Analysis of selected economic factor impacts on CO2 emissions intensity: A case study from Jordan, 1990–2015
https://www.ksh.hu/statszemle_archive/regstat/2022/2022_01/rs120101.pdf
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The Regional Science Association International (RSAI), founded in 1954, is an international community of scholars interested in the regional impacts of national or global processes of economic and social change.