Aims and Scope
Journal of Weather Changes (JWC) is a peer-reviewed, open-access journal dedicated to advancing research on weather variability, and their societal and environmental impacts. JWC serves as a multidisciplinary platform for researchers, policymakers, industry experts, and engaged citizens to explore the science of weather patterns, climate dynamics, and adaptation strategies.
Scope & Focus Areas:
JWC welcomes original research, reviews, case studies, short communications, and editorials on topics including, but not limited to:
- Climate Change & Weather Variability: Investigating long-term climate patterns and their influence on weather events.
- Artificial Intelligence studies on weather forecasting, climate analysis, and atmospheric pattern recognition using advanced computational techniques.
- Extreme Weather Events & Disaster Risk Assessment: Analyzing hurricanes, droughts, floods, wildfires, and extreme temperatures.
- Forecasting & Predictive Modelling: Advancing short-term and long-term weather prediction techniques.
- Impact on Infrastructure & Urban Resilience: Designing climate-resilient cities and infrastructure.
- Weather & Agriculture: Studying the effects of weather changes on crop yields, food security, and agronomy.
- Energy & Sustainability: Exploring the relationship between climate change, renewable energy, and power transmission.
- Public Health & Social Vulnerability: Examining how weather and climate extremes affect human health and communities.
- Climate Policy, Economics & Social Justice: Assessing legal, economic, and ethical implications of climate action.
- Climate Change Mitigation & Emission Reduction: Investigating strategies to combat global warming and promote sustainability.
- Climate Education & Public Awareness: Enhancing public understanding of climate change and its societal consequences.
Bridging Science & Real-World Solutions:
JWC is committed to fostering global dialogue and driving innovative, evidence-based solutions for climate adaptation and mitigation. By encouraging interdisciplinary collaboration across meteorology, climatology, engineering, environmental science, public policy, and social sciences, the journal serves as a catalyst for meaningful change in our rapidly evolving world.
- Weather
- Extreme weather
- Dynamic and urban climatology
- Weather data
- Climate prediction
- Climate observations and modelling
- Weather statistics
- Palaeoclimatology
- Marine climatology
- Weather observers
- Hydroclimatology
- Ecoclimatology
- Dendroclimatology
- Paleoclimate
- Storms
- Oceanography
- Ecosystems
- Weather stations
- Climatic variability
- Climate Science
- Weather hazards
- Natural physical environment
- Climate system science
- Climate and society interactions
- Atmospheric science (processes and modeling)
- Modelling impacts of weather and climate extremes
- Seasonal forecasts of climate extremes
- Policies and practices for adaptation to weather and climate extremes
- Atmosphere-ocean interactions
- Human bioclimatology
- Global warming
- Hydrology