Health Tomorrow: Interdisciplinarity and Internationality
York University, Toronto, Canada
Submission Deadline: 15th May 2016
Borders are constructed to regulate the movement of people, resources, and information, as well as to structure and appraise different forms of knowledge. They can also be used to isolate the causes of adverse health effects, protect equitable standards, recognize different health needs, and preserve the right to self-determination and privacy.
The creation and maintenance of borders is key to shaping individual access to health services, the nature and costs of these services, the power dynamics involved in their provision, and the political categories that structure our understandings of health.
Recent examples of how the creation of borders has affected health access and outcomes include calls to ban refugees over concerns of contagious illnesses; the Trans-Pacific Partnership and its impact on the pharmaceutical industry; the Ebola outbreak in West Africa and the travel restrictions that ensued; the refusing of blood donations from men who have sex with men; shifts from hospital births to home births; and Japan’s requirement that all visa applicants test negative for HIV.
In view of these heightened concerns, the fourth volume of Health Tomorrow seeks to gather research that addresses how various forms of borders in health are brought into being, structured, legitimated, shifted, contested, and crossed, as well as their implications.
Possible topics may include but are in no way limited to:
- regimes of health: health as coercion, monitoring, and control.
- barriers to access: discrimination in service provision and structuring
- borders around health professions and disciplines: “scientific” vs. “non-scientific medicine”
- legitimacy / social epistemology: who decides what counts as health knowledge?
- guarding geographical borders: epidemics, travel, and migration
- borders and free trade
- technologies that break down or maintain barriers to health services
- borders between health service providers and recipients and between institutionalized operations and everyday life
- borders within demography (race, age, gender, class, and sexuality, among other identity markers)
- borders between research and practice that require knowledge translation
Please send completed manuscripts to htii@yorku.ca by May 15th 2016.
Author Guidelines
As part of the submission process, authors are required to ensure their submission’s compliance with all of the following items. Submissions that do not comply with these guidelines may be returned to authors.
- Articles must be double-spaced and written in 12-point Times New Roman font, with one inch margins, and between 6000 – 10,000 words in length (including quotations, references, footnotes, tables, figures, diagrams, and illustrations)
- Please submit your article as a Word document (not in PDF).
- The first page must include a 100-150 word abstract summarizing the main arguments and themes of the article.
- A list of 5-7 keywords must be included after the abstract.
- Authors’ names and other identifying information must be removed in order that manuscripts may be shared with reviewers.
- The journal’s style follows the most recent edition of the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (APA).
- Articles must be submitted in English. Please refer to the most recent edition of the Canadian Oxford Dictionary.
- The Journal accepts and encourages tables, figures, diagrams, and illustrations within the article. However, these must include detailed written descriptions.
- Authors are responsible for ethics approval (if applicable) for manuscripts and must receive approval from their own institutions. Submission of a manuscript to this Journal assumes that the author has received appropriate ethics approval from their university. Proof of ethics approval (if applicable) must be provided to the journal.
- In submitting a manuscript, authors affirm that the research is original and unpublished, is not in press or under consideration elsewhere, and will not be submitted elsewhere while under consideration by the journal.
- By submitting, authors are consenting to their articles being published online, where they will be accessible to the general public.
- Authors of accepted manuscripts must license their work with Creative Commons (please see below).
Copyright Notice
We ask that authors, if their submissions are accepted, sign and complete a copyright agreement. Doing so will protect the author and the journal. We reserve the right to be the first to publish the authors’ work.
Privacy Statement
The names and email addresses will be used exclusively for the stated purposes of this journal and will not be made available for any other purpose or to any other party.
For further questions, please contact our editorial team at htii@yorku.ca.