Start

Core Topics of Interest Include (but are not limited to):
• Global governance, international organizations, and institutions
• Colonialism, imperialism, and decolonization
• Global capitalism and labor
• Transnational networks, circulations, and diasporas
• Environmental transformations and global ecologies
• Histories of consumption and material culture in a global context
• Global media, popular culture, and the circulation of cultural forms
• Gender, sexuality, and the body in transnational and cross-cultural perspectives
• Global fashion, food, and everyday life
• Technology, infrastructures, and mobility
• Knowledge production and scientific exchanges
• History of emotions, ideas, and religions in global perspective
• Tourism, leisure, and the global commodification of experience
• Critical historiography and methodologies of global history

Editorial Structure
1. Opening Section (Editorial Introduction)
A short introductory piece presenting the issue’s theme, core questions, and broader context. It may be written by the editorial team or guest editors.
2. Articles and Thematic Clusters
This combined section includes original, peer-reviewed research articles that contribute to global history—particularly in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Submissions may be individual or part of a curated thematic cluster coordinated by guest editors.
It welcomes transnational, comparative, and connected histories and it is open to theoretical perspectives and historiographical debates
Thematic clusters include an editorial introduction and 3-6 coordinated contributions.
3. Dialogues & Perspectives
A flexible space for more concise and provocative contributions. This section encourages critical reflections on the methods, theories, and politics of global history.
May include position papers, manifestos, interviews, or scholarly dialogues and it is ideal for launching new debates or rethinking established narratives.
4. Archives and Sources
This section is dedicated to the exploration of archival practices, material culture, and source criticism in global historical research. It highlights underutilized archives, non-traditional documents, digital tools, and epistemological challenges related to sourcing the global past.
It includes research notes, case studies, or reflections on archival fieldwork and encourages contributions from diverse linguistic and regional contexts.
5. Reviews
A critical space for discussing recent publications in the field of global history, including monographs, edited volumes, and special journal issues.
6. Regular Columns
Traces and Echoes
This is a column dedicated to the persistences, transformations, and circulations of culture on a global scale.
Voices from the Edge
It is a column dedicated to contexts at the margins of dominant narratives, aiming to present unexpected voices and stories