Time & Society
Time & Society is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes articles, reviews, and scholarly comment that make original contributions to our understandings of the relationships between time, temporality, and social life. We welcome work that contributes to research across the arts, humanities, and social sciences (including interfaces with the sciences). We are particularly interested in multi- and inter- disciplinary work which seeks to bring different approaches, methods, theories, and/or empirical work into conversation. Critiques of, and proposals for, time-related aspects of public, social, scientific, economic, environmental, and organisational policies are also of interest. Our Letters to the Editor section provides a place for the informal exchange of topical ideas, provocations and musings related to the above. Time & Society strives to be international in scope, and independent of the interests of particular schools or directions of research, or particular political or narrow disciplinary objectives. This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE)
"Time has become one of the central topics of the social sciences. Time & Society symbolises this development and has played a major role in forming this new field of study." John Urry
"Time & Society opens up the horizon for a necessary multidisciplinary discourse between social and natural scientists, historians and psychologists, technical experts and politicians for answers to the urgent questions concerning our future." Ulrich Beck
Electronic access:
Time & Society is available electronically on SAGE Journals Online at http://tas.sagepub.com
This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE)
Time & Society is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes articles, reviews, and scholarly comment that make original contributions to our understandings of the relationships between time, temporality, and social life. We welcome work that contributes to research across the arts, humanities, and social sciences (including interfaces with the sciences). We are particularly interested in multi- and inter- disciplinary work which seeks to bring different approaches, methods, theories, and/or empirical work into conversation. Critiques of, and proposals for, time-related aspects of public, social, scientific, economic, environmental, and organisational policies are also of interest. Our Letters to the Editor section provides a place for the informal exchange of topical ideas, provocations and musings related to the above. Time & Society strives to be international in scope, and independent of the interests of particular schools or directions of research, or particular political or narrow disciplinary objectives.
Michelle Bastian | University of Edinburgh, UK |
Blake Ewing | University of Nottingham, UK |
Alexis McCrossen | Southern Methodist University, USA |
Muhammad Mughal | KFUPM Business School, Saudi Arabia |
Barbara Adam | Cardiff University, UK |
Robert Hassan | University of Melbourne, Australia |
Carmen Leccardi | University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy |
Stuart Allan | Cardiff University, UK |
Brigitte Bechtold | Central Michigan University, USA |
Taieb Belghazi | Rabat University, Morocco |
Kevin Birth | City University of New York, USA |
Julia Cook | University of Newcastle, Australia |
Kerstin Cuhls | Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research, Germany |
Keri Facer | University of Bristol, UK |
Emmanuelle Fantin | Sorbonne Université, France |
Michael G Flaherty | Eckerd College, USA |
Elizabeth Freeman | University of California, USA |
Heidrun Friese | Technical University Chemnitz, Germany |
Deborah Golden | University of Haifa, Israel |
Starla Hargita | Australian Catholic University, Australia |
Robin A. Harper | City University of New York, USA |
Paul Huebener | Athabasca University, Canada |
Kahryn Hughes | University of Leeds, UK |
Gonzalo Iparraguirre | University of Buenos Aires, Argentina |
Steve Janssen | University of Nottingham, Malaysia |
Helge Jordheim | University of Oslo, Norway |
Tanya Ann Kennedy | University of Maine-Farmington, USA |
Amanda Lagji | Pitzer College, USA |
Dawn Lyon | University of Kent, UK |
Krista Lysack | University of Western Ontario, Canada |
Natascha Mueller-Hirth | Robert Gordon University, UK |
Jeff Noonan | University of Windsor, Canada |
Helga Nowotny, Vice President | ETH Zurich, Switzerland |
Steve Ostovich | College of St. Scholastica, USA |
Gabriella Paolucci | University of Florence, Italy |
Signe Ravn | University of Melbourne, Australia |
Jorge Rosales-Salas | Universidad Mayor, Chile |
Ida Sabelis | Free University Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Elisabeth Schilling | University of Applied Administrative Sciences NRW, Germany |
Sarah Sharma | University of Toronto, Canada |
Philippa Sheail | University of Edinburgh, UK |
Jill Stauffer | Haverford College, USA |
Rachel Thomson | University of Sussex, UK |
Filip Vostal | Institute of Philosophy of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic |
Nick Yablon | University of Iowa, USA |
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.