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Constellations
The Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal
GF Psychology Bulletin
The International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society
International Labor and Working-Class History
Social Research
canon magazine
New School Economic Review
   


Constellations
Constellations is an international peer-reviewed quarterly committed to publishing the very best in contemporary political and social theory. With roots in the Frankfurt School tradition of critical theory, it brings together a plurality of perspectives, including those from the Continental and Anglo-American traditions. The journal is edited by Andrew Arato and Nadia Urbinati and publishes articles by internationally known authors as well as promising young scholars. Recent contributors have included Seyla Benhabib, Pierre Bourdieu, Jacques Derrida, Jürgen Habermas, David Held, Axel Honneth, and Ernesto Laclau. Twice a year the journal holds editorial meetings and discussions on topics of theoretical or political interest, which graduate students are welcome to attend.

Constellations
Luca Follis, Managing Editor
Department of Sociology
The New School for Social Research
65 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10003
Telephone: 212.229.8920
Fax: 212.229.9217
Email: FollL784@newschool.edu
Website: http://www.constellationsjournal.org/

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Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal
The Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal is a professional publication dedicated to providing a forum in which contemporary authors engage with the history of philosophy and its traditions. Past issues have included contributions from Hans-Georg Gadamer, Jacques Derrida, Jürgen Habermas, and Reiner Schürmann. The Journal also publishes an annual special issue, edited by members of its editorial board and dedicated to investigating the historical development of concepts and problems in the history of philosophy and their ongoing relevance to issues in contemporary philosophy. The Journal publishes twice yearly and is edited and produced by advanced graduate students in the Department of Philosophy at The New School for Social Research. Graduate students are encouraged to submit applications and résumés.

Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal
Department of Philosophy
The New School for Social Research
65 Fifth Avenue, Room 240B
New York, NY 10003
Telephone: 212.229.5735
Fax: 212.807.1669
E-mail: gfpj@newschool.edu
Website:
www.newschool.edu/gf/phil/GFPJ--LRP/GFPJ/pjhome.html

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Graduate Faculty Psychology Bulletin
The Graduate Faculty Psychology Bulletin, launched in 2003, is a semi-annual, peer-reviewed research journal created and operated by graduate students at The New School for Social Research. Articles in the Bulletin represent ongoing work and collaborations at The New School and include new research, research proposals, research methods projects, and a New School psychology historical series, as well as work from the annual Graduate Faculty Poster Session.

The Bulletin aims to foster the scientist-practitioner model within a university psychology department and to highlight the diverse empirical research being conducted by both experimental and clinical students, faculty, and alumni.

Graduate Faculty Psychology Society Bulletin
Adam Brown, Coeditor
Department of Psychology
The New School for Social Research
65 Fifth Avenue, Box 99
New York, NY 10003
Telephone: 212.254.8164
E-mail: BrowA@newschool.edu
Website: www.socialresearch.newschool.edu/psy/bulletin

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The International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society
The International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society provides a venue for articles and reviews on issues that arise at the intersections of nations, states, civil society, and global institutions. It is concerned with the interplay of macroscopic and microscopic structures and processes including changing configurations of ethnic groups, social classes, religions, and personal networks: the impact of social transformations, including new technologies of communication and media, on the order of public and private life. The journal is drawn to theoretical ideas and their connection to substantive normative concerns and encourages disciplined creativity. It is interdisci- plinary in orientation and international in scope.

This quarterly publication is now being published by the Springer Publishing Company and is edited by José Casanova, Jeffrey Goldfarb and Vera Zolberg.

For more information, contact: International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society

Managing Editors: Luca Follis, Fanon Howell, Despina Lalaki
New School for Social Research
65 Fifth Ave., room 320
New York, NY 10003
Tel: 212.229.5737
Email: IJPCS@newschool.edu
www.springer.com/journal/10767/edboard

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International Labor and Working-Class History
International Labor and Working-Class History is a semiannual publication of Cambridge University Press affiliated with the Committee on Historical Studies at The New School for Social Research. ILWCH has gained an international reputation over the past thirty years for its exploration of the historiographic dimensions of class and labor in all of their varied dimensions: theoretical, social, political, cultural, and intellectual. ILWCH is an innovative journal that also reaches beyond history into the other social sciences, connecting labor to histories of race, gender, migration, technology, and a host of other topics.

International Labor and Working-Class History
The New School for Social Research
80 Fifth Avenue, 5th Floor
New York, NY 10011
Telephone: 212.229.5921
Fax: 212.229.5929
E-mail: ilwch@newschool.edu
Web site: www.socialresearch.newschool.edu/history/ilwch

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Social Research
An award-winning international quarterly of the social sciences, Social Research has been mapping the landscape of intellectual thought since 1934. Most issues are theme-driven, combining historical analysis, theoretical explanation, and reportage in rigorous and engaging discussion by some of the world's leading scholars and thinkers. Articles cover various fields of the social sciences and the humanities and thus promote the interdisciplinary aims that have characterized The New School for Social Research since its inception. Recent issues have focused on such themes as "Busyness," "The Worldly Philosophers at Fifty: A Tribute to Robert Heilbroner," "Errors: Consequences of Big Mistakes in the Natural and Social Sciences," and "Courage."

Our conference series, launched in 1988, publishes proceedings of conferences organized by the journal. The conferences aim to enhance public understanding of critical and contested issues by exploring them in broad historical and cultural contexts. Recent conferences have addressed "Fairness: Its Role in Our Lives," "Their America: The U.S. in the Eyes of the Rest of the World," "Fear: Its Political Uses and Abuses," "Islam: The Public and Private Spheres," and "International Justice, War Crimes, and Terrorism: The US Record."

Social Research
Arien Mack, Editor and
Alfred J. and Monette C. Marrow Professor of Psychology
Cara Schlesinger, Managing Editor
65 Fifth Avenue, Room 344
New York, NY 10003
Telephone: 212.229.5776
Fax: 212.229.5476
Email: socres@newschool.edu
Website: www.socres.org

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canon magazine
www.canonmagazine.org

canon magazine is the sole interdisciplinary student-run magazine of the NSSR. The magazine is an open forum for scholarship and perspectives for subjects in and out of academia. canon is not associated with any single discipline and uniquely aims to represent the scholarly passion of the entire NSSR student body.

canon magazine began in 1988 as a newsletter for what was then called the Graduate Faculty. Frustration over the university environment dominated those first few years … and to honor that, the newsletter was renamed Rant + Rave. Provocations reigned, as did angry letters about there being too many provocations.

By 1997, the publication was renamed canon, in an effort to embrace the diversity of work by the students and to quite literally rewrite the canon. The magazine was eventually published as a print issue twice a year. By 2007, canon had become an online forum for the best of student opinion and scholarship within the NSSR.

Opinions printed in canon are not necessarily those of the editors or of The New School for Social Research.

canon magazine
The New School for Social Research
80 Fifth Avenue, Room 520
New York, NY 10003
Telephone: 212.229.2719, x.3021
E-mail: canon@newschool.edu
Website: www.canonmagazine.org

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New School Economic Review
The New School Economic Review aims to be a student-run journal with a content influenced by the history and tradition of the New School.

New School's history points to a multidisciplinary and heterodox approach to the social sciences. The early Classical thinkers - Smith, Ricardo and Marx - realized that the study of economics must be the study of political economy - economics within a social and political context. In keeping with this tradition, the New School Economic Review will serve as a medium for critical thinking in economics but with a multidisciplinary perspective encompassing all the social sciences. Furthermore, the NSER will aim to develop a forum for professors, practitioners, and students to discuss current issues in the discipline of economics while sharing insights from other disciplines, as well as debating world political and social affairs.

Email: nser@newschool.edu
Website: http://www.newschool.edu/gf/nser/

  

   
   
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