The editors of International Development Planning Review (IDPR) have selected the following paper as the Featured Article in IDPR 46.1: 'Transnational marriage networks for intra-Asian circuit of mobilities, investment and development: Vietnamese marriage migrant women’s investments in Vietnam' by HaeRan Shin and Thi My Hang Bui
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.
Call for a Viewpoint Editor: International Development Planning Review
International Development Planning Review (IDPR), a peer-reviewed journal which provides an interdisciplinary platform for the critical study of development related practices, planning and policy in the global South, invites applications for the position of Viewpoint Editor.
Featured in International Development Planning Review 45.1: Between the village and the city: the in-betweenness of rural young people in East Indonesia
The editors of International Development Planning Review (IDPR) have selected the following paper as the Featured Article in IDPR 45.1. This paper will be free to access for a limited time: 'Between the village and the city: the in-betweenness of rural young people in East Indonesia' by Jessica Clendenning.
Featured in International Development Planning Review 44.4: Uncovering the individual/collective divide in planning responses to informal settlements as a structural cause of tenure insecurity in Phnom Penh, Cambodia
“The current pressures on Phnom Penh’s urban environment caused by neoliberalism and the rise of China as a global and economic political actor create an environment of dispossession and displacement for the urban poor where land title is not sufficient to guarantee tenure security.”- Johanna Brugman on her article 'Uncovering the individual/collective divide in planning responses to informal settlements as a structural cause of tenure insecurity in Phnom Penh, Cambodia', the latest Featured Article from IDPR. Available to read for free via Open Access.