Nordia Geographical Publications (NGP) is an open access non-profit journal published by the Geographical Society of Northern Finland and the Geography Research Unit at the University of Oulu. NGP publishes yearly theme issues and the doctoral theses of the research unit. 

The scope of the journal covers empirical and theoretical interventions from any branch of geography. NGP particularly welcomes research that is committed to northern dimensions of human, physical and applied geography.

Open access NGP publications are published under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0) license which ensures that authors retain full copyright to their work. The journal follows the peer review standards set by the Federation of Finnish Learned Societies (TSV) and it is indexed in the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) and Scopus.

Announcements

Call for Papers - Fieldwork in geography and geographies of fieldwork

2025-03-27

The Geographical Society of Northern Finland and the Geography Research Unit at the University of Oulu are pleased to announce a call for papers for Nordia Geographical Publications' Theme Issue on "Fieldwork in geography and geographies of fieldwork".

This theme issue aims to bring together research and discussions about fieldwork, which is a topic that connects geographers and geographically oriented scholarship across (sub)disciplines.

Deadline for he preliminary title and abstract is 30th of April, 2025 and the manuscript submission deadline is 30th of September, 2025.

Read more about Call for Papers - Fieldwork in geography and geographies of fieldwork

Current Issue

Vol. 54 No. 6 (2025): The Racialised Geographies of the Far-Right: Climate Politics in Finland and Russia
					View Vol. 54 No. 6 (2025): The Racialised Geographies of the Far-Right: Climate Politics in Finland and Russia

Over the past decade, the parliamentary far right has become one of the most significant political actors. This dissertation contributes to research on the political ecology and geography of the far right by examining the racial dimensions of far-right climate politics. It focuses on two far-right groups: the Finnish parliamentary party Perussuomalaiset (Finns Party) and the Russian extra-parliamentary far-right group, the Izborsk Club. The empirical material is based on interviews with Finns Party members of parliament, local politicians, and grassroots activists, as well as an analysis of the Izborsk Club’s political publications.

Comprising three independent research articles and a summary, the dissertation demonstrates various strategies by which these groups engage in climate obstructionism—that is, the delaying, slowing down, and denial of climate policy. The dissertation argues that the far right’s climate obstructionism is intertwined with both sensationalist and subtle forms of ecological racism, in which, through environmental determinism and populationist framings, the political and moral responsibility of the climate crisis is shifted to racialised peoples and places. Far-right climate obstructionism reproduces racist structures by redefining the meaning of “race” and undermining the realisation of climate justice.

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Published: 2025-09-26
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