Announcements

Call for paper issue 19 (2026)

2025-03-17

Social production of habitat and regulation of land and housing in times of housing crisis in the global North and South

The journal Habitat and Society is calling for articles for issue 19: "Social production of habitat and regulation of land and housing in times of housing crisis in the global North and South." This coincides with the proposed theme for the IV International Colloquium on Urban Conflicts, which will take place at the Institute of Geography and Territorial Planning (IGOT) of the University of Lisbon, on July 9, 10, and 11, 2025.


Articles can be submitted to any of its three sections: Special Articles, Miscellany, and L.E.D. (Submissions). We recommend reading the journal's focus and scope section.


The journal has renewed its FECYT 2024 quality seal and is indexed in the Emerging Sources Citation Index, DIALNET, and evaluated in LATINDEX. Catalog v2.0 (2018 -) ERIHPlus and REDIB. Ibero-American Network of Innovation and Scientific Knowledge


Habitat and Society is an open journal that does not charge fees to readers or authors. It is supported by the altruistic work of the editorial and scientific team, through grants from the University of Seville's Research Plan and funding from the Department of Architectural Graphic Expression at the University of Seville.
Articles are accepted for publication in Spanish, English, Portuguese, and French.


Full manuscripts must be submitted through the OJS platform, following the journal's "Guidelines for Authors" and code of conduct. Ten research papers will be selected for publication after peer review and addressing any requested corrections.


Deadline for manuscript submission: December 30, 2025

Read more about Call for paper issue 19 (2026)

Current Issue

					View No. 17 (2024): Energy transition and territorial conflicts: towards a participatory management model. Presentation of the issue

As a result of the depletion of cheap fossil fuels and the growing evidence of the climate crisis caused by the large-scale burning of these energy sources since the Industrial Revolution, the ‘energy transition’ is a joint undertaking involving both institutional political actors and the predominant political groups within the general population. However, despite being signatories to the broad consensus known as the ‘Green Pact’, institutional actors are failing to truly replace fossil fuels, preferring instead to advocate their continued intensive consumption, a consumption that continues to increase, with the complementary presence of wind and solar energy. As a result, what we are witnessing is not an energy transition, but rather an energy expansion. No one is questioning (let alone attempting to correct) our ‘imperial lifestyle’, which is based on extremely high levels of energy and material consumption. Moreover, the industrial axiom that higher energy consumption automatically leads to greater well-being remains intact.
This ‘energy transition’ has alarming social and territorial implications, such as the rise of mining activities and their justification, particularly in certain regions of the Global South (extractivism), and the consequent consolidation of the attitude that looks at former colonies (as well as other regions that are slowly being encroached upon as the boundaries of the mining lands themselves and the tailings pits they generate become ever more extensive) as areas to be sacrificed. In our text, we offer a critique of this so-called ‘transition’ strategy, touching on key points that form the framework of the case study on which this monograph focuses.

Published: 2024-10-25

Miscellaneous Papers

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