The Under-Representation of the Global South on Editorial Boards in Criminology

Abstract

Less than 5% of editorial board members across all 69 journals listed under the Criminology and Penology category of Clarivate’s Web of Science database have affiliations with institutions in the Global South. Moreover, editorial board members from the Global South are significantly more likely to sit on lower “quality” journals than their Global North counterparts. The extreme skewness in regional representation of editorial board membership is symptomatic of a broader marginalization of the Global South in academia in general, and criminology specifically. The study’s findings should be of importance (and concern) to all criminologists who believe that a more diverse, equitable, and inclusive representation of scholars across all phases of the academic publishing process is key to better understanding the context of crime: a global problem. A number of recommendations are outlined that can be used to increase the regional representativeness of editorial boards.

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Published: 2025-02-17
Issue:Online First
Section:Articles
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How to Cite
Breetzke, G. (2025) “The Under-Representation of the Global South on Editorial Boards in Criminology”, International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy. doi: 10.5204/ijcjsd.3719.

Author Biography

University of Pretoria
 South Africa

Gregory is an Associate Professor in the Department of Geography, Geoinformatics and Meteorology at the University of Pretoria. He is a spatial crime researcher whose research focuses on the geospatial analysis of crime and criminal offenders. He is particularly interested in examining crime patterns and trends and how they vary across space and time. Other current interests include the development of indigenous theories of crime as well as examining crime as a development issue.