About the Journal

The publication of Himalayan Greenprint is a peer-reviewed publication that publishes studies that look at how environmental systems interact with sustainable practices and the utilization of natural resources in a variety of geographical and ecological contexts. The journal provides a broad platform for academics to perform critical evaluations of the literature, apply creative and rigorous methodology in their analyses, and carry out their work utilizing empirical methods.

Research has been published that explores the interconnections between climate, land, water, organisms and human institutions, as well as not making generalizations of the same environmental conditions and/or outputs throughout the globe. There will be a specific focus on areas that see multiple environmental pressures meeting as well as boundaries set by governance, limits set by economic means, and access to data which is not equitable.

Work shows up from fields like environmental science, farming, water systems, trees, and similar areas. Studies about policy get attention if built on solid proof instead of opinion. Knowledge held by native communities can fit in when used as organized insight, not just background detail.

The journal publishes work that:

  • Depends on original data, repeatable procedures, or explicit analytical frameworks.

  • Investigates resource usage and ecological processes at local, regional, or comparative levels.

  • Uses evidence-based analysis to address environmental policy and management.

  • Views regional and indigenous environmental knowledge as organized systems of practice and observation.

  • Permits appropriate integrative methods while preserving disciplinary depth.

Papers and articles in environmental science, ecology, hydrology, forestry, agriculture, and allied subjects are encouraged to be submitted to the journal. A double-blind peer review process is applied to each and every manuscript that is submitted. "Analytical rigor," "clarity of argument," and "relevance" to the study and management of environmental concerns are the criteria used to make decisions about manuscripts.