Editorial
SeasonÕs greetings! It brings us great pleasure
to welcome you to this guest-edited issue of Transmotion on Indigeneity and the Anthropocene.
And with no apology for brevity, it also brings me great pleasure to usher you straight on to Martin PremoliÕs wonderful editorial/introduction to this issueÉ
Congratulations to Martin and David for a deeply absorbing issue—the first
of two, with the second to come in the spring of 2022. As ever, our team of
review editors have put together a fantastic selection of reviews, and we are
grateful as ever to all those who work with us behind the scenes to put the
journal together and make it a valuable contribution to the field.
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As a reminder to our readers, Transmotion is
open access, thanks to the generous sponsorship of the University of Kent: all
content is fully available on the open internet with no paywall
or institutional access required, and it always will be. We are published under
a Creative Commons 4.0 license, meaning in essence that any articles or reviews
may be copied and re-used provided that the source and author is acknowledged. We
strongly believe in this model, which makes research and academic insight
available and useable for the widest possible community. We also believe in
keeping to the highest academic standards: thus all articles are double-blind peer reviewed by at least two reviewers, and
each issue approved by an editorial board of senior academics in the field
(listed in the Front Matter of the full PDF and in the online ÓAboutÓ section).
David
Stirrup December 2021
David
Carlson
Theodore C.
Van Alst
James
Mackay
Bryn Skibo-Birney