Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T22:28:33.094Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Editor's Preface

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 April 2015

Robert F. Morgan*
Affiliation:
University of New Mexico, USA
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

A peer-reviewed Cambridge University Press online journal, the Journal of Tropical Psychology has this rationale: While there continues to be argument as to how much climate change is due to human or corporate events, there is no disagreement that the earth is becoming warmer, leading to a climate with more moisture in the air, stronger storms, flooding, and a great change for all the inhabitants of the earth, particularly our human cousins in ever more nations. To understand the psychology of our planetary future, we may access the psychologists of tropical climates who are already successful in their adaptation to a daily life in an environment we may all share eventually. To provide a vehicle for these psychologists can be a valuable service, particularly since psychological journal articles originating in Europe or the United States have long provided the bulk of scientific and professional publications. Yet there is very substantial psychological work being done in tropical zone countries and regions. A few national and regional journals like the Australia's Psychological Science or the regional online Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology are examples. A Journal of Tropical Psychology is specifically circum-global and unites the rapidly growing torrid climate-related nations around the earth in the development and sharing of their psychological discoveries.

Type
Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2015 

“If you want something you never had before, you must do something you have never done before.”

-South African Proverb, per Nathan Hare (2002).

Aims and Scope

A peer-reviewed Cambridge University Press online journal, the Journal of Tropical Psychology has this rationale: While there continues to be argument as to how much climate change is due to human or corporate events, there is no disagreement that the earth is becoming warmer, leading to a climate with more moisture in the air, stronger storms, flooding, and a great change for all the inhabitants of the earth, particularly our human cousins in ever more nations. To understand the psychology of our planetary future, we may access the psychologists of tropical climates who are already successful in their adaptation to a daily life in an environment we may all share eventually. To provide a vehicle for these psychologists can be a valuable service, particularly since psychological journal articles originating in Europe or the United States have long provided the bulk of scientific and professional publications. Yet there is very substantial psychological work being done in tropical zone countries and regions. A few national and regional journals like the Australia's Psychological Science or the regional online Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology are examples. A Journal of Tropical Psychology is specifically circum-global and unites the rapidly growing torrid climate-related nations around the earth in the development and sharing of their psychological discoveries.

Countries “Tropical countries are those that lie within the region that we call the tropics. The tropics is the zone between the Tropic of Cancer, the parallel of latitude at 23 ½º North, and the Tropic of Capricorn, the parallel of latitude at 23 ½º South. Everywhere in the tropics is struck by the sun's perpendicular rays at noon on a minimum of one day in each year. At the very center of the tropics lies the equator, a spot equidistant from the north and south poles. Many people associate tropical countries with a few islands and palm trees, but in fact, a large section of the world lies within the tropics. In the Western Hemisphere, tropical countries include Mexico, all of Central America, all of the Caribbean islands from just south of Nassau in the Bahamas, and the top half of South America, including Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana, as well as the northern portions of Chile, Argentina, Paraguay, and Brazil. In Africa, the only nations that cannot be called tropical countries are Morocco and Tunisia in the north and Lesotho and Swaziland in the south. All the rest lie either entirely, or at least partly, in the tropics. While no European countries are tropical countries, the Middle East has four tropical countries: Yemen, which is entirely in the tropics, and parts of Saudi Arabia, Oman, and United Arab Emirates. India, in southern Asia, lies mostly in the tropics, and all countries of Southeast Asia are tropical countries. Australia, Micronesia, the Marshall Islands, Kiribati, and most of the other island nations of Oceania in the South Pacific are tropical countries, as well.” -Answers.com 2010

Climates In addition to the geographical limits of past designated tropical countries, the rapidly expanding “Torrid Zone” (Harding, Reference Harding2009) increasingly includes additional countries and neighboring areas where people experience the same tropical climate. These will also be considered.

Summary Objectives for this Journal:

To disseminate progress in adaptation to the global expansion tropical climates

To share the full range of psychological progress in the growing tropical climate regions

To develop an international network of psychologists working in these regions

Editorial Board

Jesus Chuy Aros, Tennessee, USA

John Michael Compton, Hawaii, USA

Robert Corwyn, Arkansas, USA

Florence Denmark, New York, USA

Joseph O. Prewitt Diaz, Virginia, USA

Leonard Elkind, Florida, USA

Paul Fisher, Norwich, U.K.

Koong-hean Foo, Singapore

Deborah Graham, Cairns, Australia (Managing Editor 2012–2014)

Edward Helmes, Townsville, Australia

Jagat Jerath, Chandigarh, India

Senthu Jeyaraj, Singapore

Nigel Marsh, Malaysia

Stephen Naylor, Singapore

Nenna Ndukwe, Singapore

Kevin Ronan, Rockhampton, Australia

Samuel Root, Glasgow, Scotland U.K.

Halleh Seddighzadeh, Nevada, USA

Irina Singh, Chandigarh, India

K. Thirumaran, Singapore

Benjamin R. Tong, San Francisco, California, USA

Carl Word, Berkeley, California, USA

Ann S. Yabusaki, Hawaii, USA

References

Harding, S. (2009) Introduction, Torrid Zone Symposium, United Nations Youth Conference, Brisbane.Google Scholar