The International Journal of Social Quality

(formerly The European Journal of Social Quality)

Editor: Laurent van der Maesen, International Association on Social Quality


Published in partnership with the International Association on Social Quality and the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences


 Available on JSTOR

See also The European Journal of Social Quality

Volume 14 / 2024, 2 issues per volume

Aims & Scope

The International Journal of Social Quality (formerly the European Journal of Social Quality) is a peer-reviewed, scholarly journal which has a primary focus on the interpretation of social quality through a wide range of disciplines, including social policy, economics, sociology, law and legal studies, philosophy, political science, geography, health sciences, and public administration. The journal seeks to create a forum for scientists, researchers, policy makers, and practitioners to discuss issues related to social quality based on qualitative and quantitative methods, normative debate and action-oriented case studies. The journal also discusses the social quality theory and approach in comparison with other approaches such as the quality of life, social capital, human security, the capability approach, and the human development or social harmony approach. Special attention is given to global sustainability challenges addressed from the social quality and human security approach.


Indexing/Abstracting

The International Journal of Social Quality is indexed/abstracted in:

  • Bibliometric Research Indicator List (BFI)
  • Columbia International Affairs Online (CIAO)
  • Current Abstracts (EBSCO)
  • European Reference Index for the Humanities and the Social Sciences (ERIH PLUS)
  • Geobase (Elsevier)
  • IBR – International Bibliography of Book Reviews of Scholarly Literature on the Humanities and Social Sciences (De Gruyter)
  • IBZ – International Bibliography of Periodical Literature in the Humanities and Social Sciences (De Gruyter)
  • Norwegian Register for Scientific Journals, Series and Publishers
  • Political Science Complete (EBSCO)
  • Scopus (Elsevier) 
  • Social Sciences Abstracts (H.W. Wilson/EBSCO)
  • Social Sciences Index (H.W. Wilson/EBSCO)
  • Social Services Abstracts (CSA/ProQuest)
  • Social Work Abstracts (EBSCO)
  • Sociological Abstracts (CSA/ProQuest)
  • SocINDEX (EBSCO)
Editor: Laurent J.G. van der Maesen, International Association on Social Quality, Netherlands

Editorial Board
Vanessa Boanada Fuchs, University of St. Gallen, Switzerland
Tony Bradley, Liverpool Hope University, UK
Tim Cadman, Griffith University, Australia
Des Gasper, International Institute of Social StudiesErasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands
Ka Lin, Zhejiang University, China
Ren Liying, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China
Paolo Motta, EURISPES, Italy
Harry Nijhuis, International Association on Social Quality, The Netherlands
Zuzana Reptova Novakova, International Institute of Social Sciences, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands
Claire Wallace, School of Social Science, University of Aberdeen, UK
Li Wei, Institute of Sociology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China

Editorial Team
Floris Bruin, International Association on Social Quality, Netherlands
Harry G. J. Nijhuis (interim managing editor), International Association on Social Quality, Netherlands

International Advisory Committee
Alan Walker (Chair), University of Sheffield, UK
Viktoriia Blyzniuk, Ukrainian National Academy of Sciences, Ukraine
Steve Corbett, Liverpool Hope University, UK
William Darrow, Florida International University, USA
Eric Fong, The University of Hong Kong, HK
Renato Fontana, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy
Ananta Kumar Giri, Madras Institute of Development Studies, India
David Gordon, University of Bristol, UK
Chen Guangjin, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China
Erika K. Gubrium, Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway
Rolf Dieter Hepp, Free University Berlin, Germany
Peter Herrmann, Max Planck Institute for Social Law & Social Policy, Germany
Valerly Heyets, Ukraine National Academy of Sciences, Ukraine
David Kergel, International University of Applied Studies, Germany
Stein Kuhnle, University of Bergen, Norway
Huck-ju Kwon, Seoul National University, South Korea
Ota de Leonardis, University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy
Mario Ivan Lopez, Kyoto University, Japan
Yi Pan, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China
Li Peilin, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China
Sony Pellissery, National Law School of India University, India
Heloísa Perista, CESIS, Portugal
Maria Petmesidou, Democritus University of Thrace, Greece
Marco Ricceri, EURISPES, Italy
Péter Róbert, TÁRKI Social Research Institute, Hungary
Göran Therborn, The Linnaeus University, Sweden
Anna Tsetoura, Hellenic Open University, Greece
Johannes M. Waldmüller, FLACSO Sede Ecuador, Edcuador
Paul R. Ward, Flinders University, Australia
Jaap Westbroek, Advisor International Association on Soical Quality, Netherlands
Judith Wolf, Radboud university medical centre, Netherlands
Susann Worschech, European University Viadrina, Germany
Cui Yan, Institute of Sociology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China

 

Manuscript Submission

Please review the submission and style guidelines carefully before submitting.

Those wishing to submit articles should send them to the editor, Laurent J.G. van der Maesen, along with complete contact information, at info@socialquality.org.

All contributions are externally refereed by scholars of international repute. Contributors can expect to be satisfactorily apprised of the progress of their manuscripts.
The Journal does not accept unsolicited books for review.

Have other questions? Please refer to the Berghahn Info for Authors page for general information and guidelines including topics such as article usage and permissions for Berghahn journal article authors.


Publication Ethics Statement

Authors published in The International Journal of Social Quality (IJSQ) certify that their works are original and their own. The editors certify that all materials, with the possible exception of editorial introductions, book reviews, and some types of commentary, have been subjected to double-blind peer review by qualified scholars in the field. While the publishers and the editorial board make every effort to see that no inaccurate or misleading data, opinions, or statements appear in this journal, they wish to make clear that the data and opinions appearing in the articles herein are the sole responsibility of the contributor concerned. For a more detailed explanation concerning these qualifications and responsibilities, please see the complete IJSQ ethics statement.

Annual Subscriptions

Volume 14/2024, 2 issues p.a. (spring, winter)
ISSN 1757-0344 (Print) • ISSN 1757-0352 (Online)
(rates include handling & surface postage)

Open Access, Print and Archive Pricing

The International Journal of Social Quality is open access starting with Volume 11. Please contact Berghahn for print-only and archive pricing.


Please direct all inquiries to orders@berghahnjournals.com

Berghahn Journals Subscriptions
c/o Berghahn Books
20 Jay Street, Suite 502
Brooklyn, NY 11201
Phone: 212-233-6004

 

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Thanks to the generous support from many involved academic institutions in Europe, Asia and Australia, IJSQ will be published as an Open Access journal starting with Volume 11. There are no submission or article processing charges (APCs) for articles published under this arrangement, resulting in no direct charges to authors.

The Social Consequences of Brexit for the UK and Europe

Euroscepticism, Populism, Nationalism, and Societal Division

Author:

Abstract

This article examines the 2016 Referendum on the United Kingdom’s membership of the European Union and draws on initial research into the reasons that the UK voted to leave and demographics of the leave vote. This initial analysis suggests that the Brexit (British Exit) vote reveals wider and deeper societal tensions along the lines of age, class, income, and education (Goodwin and Heath 2016). By providing an account of the background and events of the referendum, this article asserts that the vote was a case study in populist right-wing Eurosceptic discourse (Leconte 2010; Taggart 2004), but it also reveals strong elements of English nationalism (including British exceptionalism and social conservatism) in parts of British society (Henderson et al. 2016; Wellings 2010). Given this, the article begins to make sense of Brexit from a social quality perspective and outlines a possible social quality approach to the UK and Europe post-Brexit.

Welfare after Growth

Theoretical Discussion and Policy Implications

Author:

The article discusses approaches to welfare under no-growth conditions and against the background of the growing significance of climate change as a socio-ecological issue. While most governments and scholars favor “green deal” solutions for tackling the climate crisis, a growing number of discussants are casting doubt on economic growth as the answer to it and have provided empirical evidence that the prospects for globally decoupling economic growth and carbon emissions are very low indeed. These doubts are supported by recent contributions on happiness, well-being and alternative measures of measuring prosperity, which indicate that individual and social welfare is by no means equivalent to GDP growth. If the requirements of prosperity and welfare go well beyond material sustenance, then approaches that aim to conceptualize welfare under the circumstances of a “stable state economy” become more relevant. A qualitatively different environmental and welfare policy governance network would need to integrate the redistribution of carbon emissions, work, time, income and wealth. Since social policies will be necessary to address the emerging inequalities and conflicts, this article considers the roles that the various “no-growth” approaches dedicate to social policy and welfare instruments.

The Theatre of Human Trafficking

A Global Discourse on Lao Stages

Author:

Using the Lao PDR as a case study, this paper analyses human trafficking as discourse. Human trafficking is identified as a global discourse that is globalized through a set of powerful relations and actors. Following Appadurai, it is argued that this global discourse is not passively received by local actors such as the Lao state. This demonstrated by unravelling the global–local interactions through which it has entered the Lao social landscape. This is complemented with an analysis of a series of events in which the human trafficking discourse is staged on Lao soil. On this basis, the paper argues that the global human trafficking discourse is actively indigenized through, amongst other things, the social practice of staging. In addition, the paper argues that this indigenized discourse is employed by actors in more localized power struggles; in this case, by the Lao state as a response to boundary crises triggered by the phenomenon of cross-border migration into Thailand as an important manifestation of the overarching process of transition.

Author:

Information and Communications Technologies (ICTs) open up the possibility of new forms of relationship and engagement, which form part of the sociality of modern society, leading some to characterize this as a transition to an "information society", a "network society", or a "third industrial revolution". This has implications for Social Quality, especially in terms of social cohesion, social inclusion and social empowerment. Drawing upon recent research we find that ICTs have added new dimensions to social life in ways that go beyond the original formulations of the digital divide. Conversely, Social Quality can also add important insights into our understanding of the relationship between society and technology. The article argues that discussions of Social Quality should take these dimensions into account.

Four Dimensions of Societal Transformation

An Introduction to the Problematique of Ukraine

Author:

Abstract

Four years after the Revolution of Dignity, the Ukrainian society is passing through multiple parallel transitions. More often than not, the problematique of Ukraine is framed as a discussion of the speed and extent of reforms’ adoption. This article highlights the need to look in a more organic, interrelated manner, with attention to the sociospatial context that embeds all of the potential institutional change targeted by reforms. Using interviews and group discussions with public servants and civil society actors actively involved in the ongoing reform processes, this article zooms out from the rather fragmented reforms discussion to embed it in a broader societal context. It highlights crucial developments in the four quadrants of the social quality debate: the socioeconomic, the sociopolitical, the sociocultural/welfare, and the socioenvironmental dimension of societal life in postrevolution Ukraine.