Urban Studies

OnlineOpen Articles

OnlineOpen Articles



Open Access

The OnlineOpen publishing option for Wiley geography and urban studies journals allows you to access select content without a subscription. When you see the open sign next to an article you can read this for free.

Read some of the existing OnlineOpen papers published in our geography and urban studies journals. No subscription required:



URBAN STUDIES

International Journal of Urban and Regional Research

Financializing Desalination: Rethinking the Returns of Big Infrastructure
Alex Loftus, Hug March

Give me a laboratory and I will lower your carbon footprint!’
James Evans and Andrew Karvonen

The ‘graying’ of ‘green’ zones: spatial governance and irregular settlement in Xochimilco, Mexico City
Jill Wigle

Multiple temporalities of policy circulation: gradual, repetitive and delayed processes of BRT adoption in South African Cities
Astrid Woo


GEOGRAPHY

Antipode

Between boundaries: from commoning and guerrilla gardening to community land trust development in Liverpool
Matthew Thompson

Carbon and cash in climate assemblages: the making of a new global citizenship
Seema Arora-Jonsson

Lifetimes of Disposability and Surplus Entrepreneurs in Bagong Barrio, Manila
Geraldine Pratt, Caleb Johnston, Vanessa Banta

Area: A Journal of the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG)

Creating ambiances, co-constructing place: a poetic transect across the city
Phil Jones, Chris Jam

Are they Nomads, Travellers or Roma? An analysis of the multiple effects of naming assemblages
Gaja Maestri

Migration Decision-Making: A Geographical Imaginations Approach
Maddy Thompson

I want this place to thrive: volunteering, co-production and creative labour
Saskia Warren

On being a foreign body in the field, or how reflexivity around translation can take us beyond language 
Anna Krzywoszynska

Using interviews to research body size: methodological and ethical considerations
Jenny Lloyd and Peter Hopkins

Postgraduate encounters with sub-disciplinary divides: entering the economic/development geography trading zone
Rory Horner

Militant research against-and-beyond itself: critical perspectives from the university and occupy London
Sam Halvorsen

Bulletin of Latin American Research

Armed Violence and the Politics of Gun Control in Brazil: An Analysis of the 2005 Referendum
Roxana P. Cavalcanti

The US Role in the 1964 Coup in Brazil: A Reassessment
Anthony W. Pereira

The Canadian Geographer/Le Geographe Canadien

Guidelines for creating framework data for GIS analysis in low- and middle-income countries
Prestige Tatenda Makanga, Nadine Schuurman, Charfudin Sacoor, Helena Boene, Peter von Dadelszen, Tabassum Firoz

Geography Compass 

Practicing Collective Biography
Roberta Hawkins, Karen Falconer Al-Hindi, Pamela Moss, Leslie Kern

Alcohol, young people and urban life
Samantha Wilkinson

Numerical modelling of braided river morphodynamics: review and future challenges
Richard D. Williams, James Brasington, D. Murray Hicks

Young people, community radio and urban life 
Catherine Wilkinson

Legal Geography: becoming spatial detectives 
Luke Bennett, Antonia Layard

Geografiska Annaler: Series B Human Geography

The green economy and post growth regimes: regimes: opportunities and challenges for economic geography
Christian Schulz,Ian Bailey 

Geographical Analysis

From big noise to big data: toward the verification of large data sets for understanding regional retail flows
Robin Lovelace*, Mark Birkin, Philip Cross and Martin Clarke

Geographical Research

Perceptions of risk among households in two Australian coastal communities
Carmen E. Elrick-Barr, Timothy F. Smith, Dana C. Thomsen and Benjamin L. Preston 

Assessing socio-economic vulnerability to climate change impacts and environmental hazards in New South Wales and Queensland, Australia
Erin F. Smith

The Geographical Journal

One step forward, two steps back? The fading contours of (in)justice in competing discourses on climate migration
Giovanni Bettini, Sarah Louise Nash, Giovanna Gioli

The changing geography of global trade in electronic discards: time to rethink the e-waste problem
J. Lepawsky 

Intimate encounters: the negotiation of difference within the family and its implications for social relations in public space
G. Valentine, A. Piekut, and C. Harris

A policy on the move? Spatial planning and State Actors in the post-devolutionary UK and Ireland
B. Clifford and J. Morphet

The Geographical Review

Organization and Management Challenges of Russia's Icebreaker Fleet
Arild Moe, Lawson Brigham

Global Networks

Sustainable urbanism in the age of photoshop: images, experiences and the role of learning through inhabiting the international travels of a planning model
Elizabeth Rapoport

Empowering or impeding return migration? ICT, mobile phones, and older migrants’ communications with home
Alistair Hunter

Population, Space and Place

From ‘Trailing Wives’ to the Emergence of a ‘Trailing Husbands’ Phenomenon: Retirement Migration to Rural Areas
Aileen Stockdale

Long-Distance Migration and Mortality in Sweden: Testing the Salmon Bias and Healthy Migrant Hypotheses
Gunnar Andersson, Sven Drefahl

The Impact of Internal Migration on Population Redistribution: an International Comparison
Philip Rees, Martin Bell, Marek Kupiszewski, Dorota Kupiszewska, Philipp Ueffing, Aude Bernard, Elin Charles-Edwards, John Stillwell

Contemporary and ‘messy’ rural In-migration processes: comparing counterurban and lateral rural migration
Aileen Stockdale

Family life course and the timing of women's retirement – a sequence analysis approach
Ingrid Svensson Emma Lundholm Xavier De Luna and Gunnar Malmberg 

The role of digital trace data in supporting the collection of population statistics – the case for smart metered electricity consumption data
Andy Newing, Ben Anderson, AbuBakr Bahaj and Patrick James

New mobilities across the life course: a framework for analysing demographically linked drivers of migration
Allan Findlay, David McCollum, Rory Coulter and Vernon Gayle

Going back to Pakistan for education? the interplay of return mobilities, education, and transnational living
Marta Bivand Erdal, Anum Amjad, Qamar Zaman Bodla, Asma Rubab

Careers on the move: international doctoral students at an elite British University
Adél Pásztor 

Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers

Privatising asylum: neoliberalisation, depoliticisation and the governance of forced migration
Jonathan Darling

Assemblage thinking and actor-network theory: conjunctions, disjunctions, cross-fertilisations
Martin Müller, Carolin Schurr

Time, rhythm and the creative economy
Phil Jones, Saskia Warren

Africa's passive revolution: crisis in Malawi
Andrew Brooks, Alex Loftus

Modelling the duration of residence and plans for future residential relocation: a multilevel analysis
Michael J Thomas, John C H Stillwell, Myles I Gould

‘Mortgaged lives’: the biopolitics of debt and housing financialisation
Melissa García-Lamarca, Maria Kaika

Urban civic pride and the new localism
Tom Collins

New economy, neoliberal state and professionalised parenting: mothers’ labour market engagement and state support for social reproduction in class-differentiated Britain
Sarah L Holloway, Helena Pimlott-Wilson

Regional surnames and genetic structure in Great Britain
Jens Kandt, James A Cheshire, Paul A Longley

Becoming big things: building events and the architectural geographies of incarceration in England and Wales
Dominique Moran, Jennifer Turner, Yvonne Jewkes

Sustainable flood memories, lay knowledges and the development of community resilience to future flood risk

Lindsey McEwen, Joanne Garde-Hansen, Andrew Holmes, Owain Jones, Franz Krause

In search of 'lost' knowledge and outsourced expertise in flood risk management
Graham Haughton, Greg Bankoff and Tom J Coulthard

Towards intimate geographies of peace? local reconciliation of domestic violence in Cambodia
Katherine Brickell 

The distinctive capacities of plants: re-thinking difference via invasive species
Lesley Head, Jennifer Atchison and Catherine Phillips

Zero carbon homes and zero carbon living: sociomaterial interdependencies in carbon governance
Gordon Walker, Andrew Karvonen and Simon Guy 

A critical geopolitics of observant practice at British military airshows
Matthew F Rech


The Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography

A crack in the facade? Situating Singapore in global flows of electronic waste
Josh Lepawsky, Creighton Connolly


Geo Open Access



Consider making your next geography and urban studies article Open Access

Benefits for Authors

As an author, do you search for the easiest way to make your research instantly open and accessible to millions of readers? Why not consider Wiley OnlineOpen when publishing your next article?

What is Wiley OnlineOpen?

If you are an author and you want to make your article freely available on publication, or your funding agency requires you to archive the final version of your article, then OnlineOpen is an easy option available to you in some of the best journals in the world. Authors of primary research articles (including short communications) and review articles can take advantage of OnlineOpen.

Does it mean it is free for all to read?

Yes, if you choose to publish your articles OnlineOpen then you can post the final, published PDF of their article on a website, institutional repository or other free public server, immediately on publication.

How does it work? Will my article get preferential treatment?

All OnlineOpen articles are treated in the same way as any other article. Your article will go through the journal's peer-review process and will be accepted or rejected based on the article's own merit.

Once accepted for publication, your articles are posted online on Wiley Online Library. The articles are archived for perpetuity and are registered at relevant Abstracting and Indexing Services and at CrossRef.
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Who funds?

As an author, you pay a fee to ensure that the article is made available to non-subscribers upon publication via Wiley Online Library, as well as deposited in your preferred archive. Sometimes, your funding agency or institution pays the publication charge. Authors of accepted peer-reviewed articles have the choice to pay a fee in order for their published article to be made freely accessible to all.
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