Liverpool University Press is delighted to announce that the Essays in Romanticism journal editor and the President of the International Conference for Romanticism (ICR) have agreed that Essays in Romanticism will transition to publishing two online issues per year, with one printed volume at the end of the year (combining the two issues) starting in 2024.
Featured in International Development Planning Review 45.3: Co-producing urban transport informality: evidence from owner-operator relations in the motor tricycle taxi industry in a Ghanaian town
The editors of International Development Planning Review (IDPR) have selected the following paper as the Featured Article in IDPR 45.3 and it is available to read Open Access as part of LUP Open Planning: 'Co-producing urban transport informality: evidence from owner-operator relations in the motor tricycle taxi industry in a Ghanaian town', by Millicent Awialie Akaateba, Bernard Afiik Akanpabadai Akanbang, and Ibrahim Yakubu.
Introducing ‘Minoritised Languages and Travel’: A Modern Languages Open Special Collection.
We are delighted to introduce 'Minoritised Languages and Travel', the latest special collection from Modern Languages Open, with articles that explore the interplay between and intersection of minoritised cultures and language with tourism, travel, and travel writing. Available to read Open Access.
Town Planning Review welcomes two new additions to the editorial team
The co-editors of Town Planning Review (TPR) are delighted to welcome two new additions to the editorial team of the journal – Dr Sebastian Dembski and Dr Matthew Wargent.
Through the Looking Glass: T. S. Eliot and Indian Philosophy
Manju Jain’s “Through the Looking Glass: T. S. Eliot and Indian Philosophy” is the definitive study of Eliot’s contact with Sanskrit and Buddhist texts for our generation. Drawing on the new editions of Eliot’s prose and letters, Jain examines Eliot’s lifelong engagement with and ambivalence towards Indian philosophy, comparing his attitudes to those of his teachers and contemporaries. We are pleased to share that her article is Free to Read throughout the rest of this month to August.