The Swiss Journal of Sociocultural Anthropology is the journal of the Swiss Anthropological Association SAA. It publishes ethnographically and theoretically grounded contributions on current issues and debates in social anthropology. As a tri-lingual journal with articles in English, French, and German, it seeks to strengthen the dialogue between different theoretical strands and scholarly traditions. The journal’s wide thematic scope encourages conversations across the discipline and between the various subfields of social and cultural anthropology.

Log in or create an account to submit a manuscript to the journal. For Special Issue proposals, please read the Call for Special Issues on the Announcement page and contact our editorial team directly via email.

 

Announcements

Call for Special Issue (fall 2026)

2025-05-21

The Swiss Journal of Sociocultural Anthropology invites proposals for a special issue (open theme).

The special issue consists of 4 to 6 original research articles, and an introduction by the guest editors. All articles are subject to double-blind peer-review and published Open Access free of charge. The guest editors will work in collaboration with the editorial board in selecting, reviewing, and producing the special issue scheduled for publication in the fall of 2026.

Submission details:
Deadline: 27th June 2025
Email: info@journal-sa.ch
Final decision: The selected proposal will be announced by mid July 2025.

Read more about Call for Special Issue (fall 2026)

Current Issue

Vol. 30 No. 1 (2024): Forms of Autonomy. Assembly Practices and Collective Decisions on the Margin of the State
					View Vol. 30 No. 1 (2024): Forms of Autonomy. Assembly Practices and Collective Decisions on the Margin of the State

This special issue of the Swiss Journal of Sociocultural Anthropology focuses on assembly practices as a tool for collective decision-making within human groups that claim multiple forms of political autonomy from States. The aim of this dossier is to ethnograph decision-making processes in various social spaces, both in a post-colonial indigenous context (Amazonia, Andes, North America) and in a Western European social movement (Spain). The description of these meetings reveals a multiplicity of strategies that people invent and implement in order to decide together, form a political union and try to build a society on terms that are distinct from those that characterize the state model. In doing so, these ethnographies invite us to reconsider the conceptual tools of anthropology for thinking about the political.

Guest editors: Paul Codjia and Raphaël Colliaux

Published: 2024-11-17
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