Omertaa.
Journal for Applied Anthropology.
ISSN: 1784-3308
Reserved for links to other journals for anthropology and related sciences.
If you want your link posted here, please send a request to sam.janssen@omertaa.org




KOLOR. Journal on Moving Communities

KOLOR will prioritise contributions which mainly discuss the previously mentioned issues in metropolitan settings, while offering innovative insights and incisive analysis. The issue dealt with in the contribution or its elaboration needs to be relevant in the contemporary context and to appeal to a large group of people. The latter consists of the informed larger public such as journalists, social workers, labour unionists but also other professionals who want to follow up the issue of migration and migrants. The same criteria apply to individual contributions. An article needs to be grounded on scientific rigour as well as on its social impact/relevance. At the same time while upholding high scientific standards, the language should be accessible and palatable to a wide range of people and not just the academic community.


Ethnohistory Quarterly

Ethnohistory reflects the wide range of current scholarship that is inspired by anthropological and historical approaches to the human condition. Of particular interest are those analyses and interpretations that seek to make evident the experience, organization and identities of indigenous, diasporic and minority peoples that otherwise elude the histories and anthropologies of nations, states and colonial empires. In the past the journal has published work from the disciplines of geography, literature, sociology and archaeology, as well as anthropology and history, and such submissions are encouraged. The defining characteristic of editorial policy is an openness to the theoretical and cross-cultural discussion of ethnohistorical materials, and a recognition of the wide range of academic disciplines that may have material of interest and relevance to the readers of Ethnohistory.


Kacike

KACIKE: Journal of Caribbean Amerindian History and Anthropology, is motivated by a desire to correct the long standing impression that Caribbean Amerindians were either irrelevant to the making of the modern societies and cultural formations found in the Caribbean basin, merely mute witnesses to history, or that they have been altogether absent in post-colonial Caribbean history. In addition, KACIKE endeavours to counter the impression that there were few or no historical documents that inform us of Caribbean Amerindian societies, groups, individuals, or lifeways, or that they were produced entirely by naive individuals guided solely by superficial and predetermined impressions or by agendas so sinister that absolutely nothing of importance is to be learned. Hence this journal features a historical dimension to the study of Caribbean Amerindian society and culture, extending before 1492 and after.


Anpere

The aim of anpere is to offer a flexible and relevant channel for researches as well as lay people interested in questions pertaining to the anthropology of religion. Common to all articles published here is their anthropological perspectives on religion. This means that the articles focus upon how religious individuals and groups relate to their religion and religious practice, and how outsiders understand this. Religious thoughts, practices and artefacts thus constitute the points of departure for the later contextualization, which appears in the analysis of the empirical material