Generated by GPT-5-mini| Environmental Management (journal) | |
|---|---|
| Title | Environmental Management |
| Discipline | Environmental science |
| Abbreviation | Environ. Manag. |
| Publisher | Springer Science+Business Media |
| Country | United States |
| Frequency | Bimonthly |
| History | 1976–present |
| Impact | 4.1 (2021) |
Environmental Management (journal) is a peer-reviewed scientific periodical covering research on environmental policy, conservation practice, and applied ecology. Established in the mid-1970s, the journal publishes empirical studies, modeling work, case studies, and review articles that inform practitioners at United States Environmental Protection Agency, United Nations Environment Programme, World Bank, and regional agencies such as the European Environment Agency and State of California. The journal serves as a bridge between academic research produced at institutions like University of California, Berkeley, University of Cambridge, and Chinese Academy of Sciences and implementation by organizations including The Nature Conservancy, World Wildlife Fund, and Conservation International.
The journal was founded in 1976 amid rising international interest catalyzed by events such as the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment and policy responses in countries like the United States and United Kingdom. Early volumes featured contributions from researchers affiliated with Smithsonian Institution, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and Yale University, reflecting interdisciplinary dialogues between scholars in National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration programs and regional planners in agencies such as California Department of Fish and Wildlife. Over subsequent decades the journal expanded editorial links with universities including Stanford University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and University of Tokyo and with international funders such as the European Commission and Asian Development Bank. Landmark topics tracked in the journal's history include acid rain debates related to the Air Quality Act amendments of 1990, wetland mitigation following the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, and landscape-level conservation promoted by networks like Man and the Biosphere Programme.
The journal emphasizes applied research that informs management decisions for natural and built environments at scales from site-level projects to transboundary programs. Submissions often derive from collaborations among investigators at U.S. Geological Survey, United Nations Development Programme, and universities such as Princeton University and Australian National University. The editorial policy requires original empirical data or novel synthesis, adherence to ethical standards promoted by bodies like Committee on Publication Ethics, and transparent reporting consistent with guidelines used by Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change authors. Types of articles accepted include full research articles, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, methodological notes, and policy briefs aimed at stakeholders such as European Commission Directorate-General for Environment and Ministry of Environment, Japan.
Environmental Management is abstracted and indexed in major bibliographic services widely used by researchers at institutions like Harvard University, University of Oxford, and Peking University. Indexing platforms include Science Citation Index Expanded, Scopus, and BIOSIS Previews, ensuring discoverability alongside journals published by houses such as Elsevier, Wiley-Blackwell, and Taylor & Francis. Abstracting in regional indexes ties the journal to repositories used by organizations like Food and Agriculture Organization and Inter-American Development Bank, while citation tracking via services connected to Clarivate and Google Scholar supports impact measurement used by promotion committees at universities such as University of British Columbia.
The journal's citation metrics have placed it among prominent outlets in environmental management scholarship alongside titles like Conservation Biology, Journal of Applied Ecology, and Landscape and Urban Planning. Policymakers at bodies such as United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and practitioners from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have referenced articles published in the journal when designing restoration programs and regulatory frameworks. Critical reception in academic venues has highlighted the journal's role in translating research from labs at Max Planck Institute for Ornithology and field stations affiliated with Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute into actionable guidance for agencies like Natural Resources Canada and non-governmental actors including BirdLife International.
Notable contributions include synthesis papers on adaptive management linked to programs such as Adaptive Management of Industrial-Age Landscapes and methodological advances in environmental impact assessment used by the World Bank and Asian Development Bank. Special issues have addressed themes coordinated with conferences like the International Union for Conservation of Nature World Conservation Congress and symposiums hosted by Society for Conservation Biology. Influential case studies published in the journal examined restoration projects tied to the Yellowstone National Park reintroduction debates, coastal resilience work in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, and transboundary water governance exemplified by the Mekong River Commission.
The editorial board comprises scholars and practitioners affiliated with universities and agencies including Duke University, University of Minnesota, Imperial College London, United States Geological Survey, and Australian Research Council-funded centers. The publisher, Springer Science+Business Media, issues the journal bimonthly with peer-review managed through established workflows connecting editors and reviewers associated with professional societies such as Ecological Society of America and International Association for Landscape Ecology. Submission guidelines request compliance with data-sharing expectations used by repositories like Dryad and Figshare and encourage authors to coordinate with funding agencies including National Science Foundation, Natural Environment Research Council, and European Research Council.
Category:Environmental science journals Category:Springer Science+Business Media academic journals