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期刊名称:ASIAN STUDIES REVIEW

ISSN:1035-7823
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON, ENGLAND, OXON, OX14 4RN
  出版社网址:http://www.taylorandfrancisgroup.com/
期刊网址:http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/journal.asp?issn=1035-7823&linktype=5
主题范畴:CULTURAL STUDIES;    ASIAN STUDIES

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

Asian Studies Review is multidisciplinary and welcomes contributions in the fields of anthropology, modern history, politics, international relations, sociology, modern Asian languages and literature, contemporary philosophy, religion, human geography, health sciences, and the environment. The journal focuses on the modern histories, cultures, and societies of Asia and welcomes submissions that adopt a contemporary approach to critical studies of the Asian region. Asian Studies Review welcomes research in new fields and emerging disciplines, including cultural studies, gender and sexuality studies, film and media studies, popular and youth cultures, queer studies, diasporic studies, transnational and globalisation studies. Asian Studies Review also includes review articles and book reviews.

 

Asian Studies Review is currently noted in:

Information Service, American History and Life, Bibliography of Asian Studies, C S A Worldwide Political Science Abstracts (Cambridge Scientific Abstracts), E I (Online) (Excerpta Indonesica), EBSCOhost, Historical Abstracts, Humanities International Index, International Bibliograpohy of the Social Sciences, OCLC, ProQuest, SCOPUS, Social Services Abstracts, Socialogical Abstracts, Swets Information Services, World Banking Abstracts, Thomson Gale (Gale Group) and World Magazine Bank.


Instructions to Authors

All submissions should be made online at the Asian Studies Review ScholarOne Manuscripts site. New users should first create an account. Once a user is logged onto the site submissions should be made via the Author Centre.

 

Authors should prepare and upload two versions of their manuscript. One should be a complete text, while in the second all document information identifying the author should be removed from files to allow them to be sent anonymously to referees. When uploading files authors will then be able to define the non-anonymous version as “File not for review”.

 

Authors should follow these guidelines as closely as possible, as manuscripts which do not conform to the guidelines may be returned to authors for revision.


Length and Format: The average length of articles published in Asian Studies Review is 8,000–­10,000 words. Please include an abstract of no more than 200 words and a set of up to ten keywords at the beginning of the article. Please also ensure that your manuscript is no more than 10,000 words, including abstract and all notes and references. 


Spelling: The Macquarie Dictionary should be used as the reference for correct spelling and hyphenation. In cases where the Macquarie gives alternative spellings, the first spelling or that under which the definition appears should be used. Please Note: following the Macquarie Dictionary we use Australian/British spellings, including: "-ise" and "-isation" (not "-ize" or "-ization"), "centre" (not "center"), "honour" (not "honor"), etc.  However, the original spelling of words within quoted passages should not be changed unless it is clear that there has been a typographical error.


References: Author-date citations should be used in the text, following in general the form outlined in the relevant section of the Chicago Manual of Style (1993 edition, pp. 641–51). In-text references should appear as follows and should include page numbers where appropriate:

 

(Butler, 2009)

(Oakes and Schein, 2006, p. 45)

(Sun, 2005, p. 175)

(Afshar, 2004, p.7)

(Whittaker, 2008, p. 280)

(Kearney, 1995, p. 548)

(Shiva, 2000, p. 42)

(McLennan, 20 October 2009, p. 19)

(Asahi Shimbun, 30 August 2000, p. 21)

(DFAT, 2008)

(Lao Bula, 2000, p. 5)

(Mackie, 2000)

 

Full details of publications cited should be given in a list of references at the end of the article. Please note that page numbers are required for both book chapters and journal articles. Reference list entries for the citations above would be as follows:


Monographs

 

Butler, Judith (2009) Frames of war: When is life grievable? (London: Verso).

 

Oakes, Tim and Louisa Schein, eds. (2006) Translocal China: Linkages, identities, and the reimagining of space (London: Routledge).\

Chapters in Edited Collections

 

Sun, Wanning (2005) Anhui baomu in Shanghai: Gender, class and a sense of place, in Jing Wang (ed.), Locating China: Space, place and popular culture, pp. 171–89 (London: Routledge).

 

Afshar, Haleh (2004) Introduction, in Haleh Afshar and Deborah Eade (eds), Development, women and war: Feminist perspectives, pp. 1–9 (Oxford: Oxfam).


Journal Articles

 

Whittaker, Andrea (2008) Pleasure and pain: Medical travel in Asia. Global Public Health 3(3), pp. 271–90.

 

Kearney, Michael (1995) The local and the global: The anthropology of globalization and transnationalism. Annual Review of Anthropology 24, pp. 547-66.

 

Shiva, Vandana (2000) The threat to Third World farmers. Ecologist 30, September, pp. 40-44.


Newspaper and Newsmagazine Items

 

Press items that have a byline denoting the author should be cited in the text like other publications, e.g. (McLennon, 2009, p. 19), and should be included in the list of references at the end of the article as follows:

 

McLennan, David (2009) Australians 'ignorant' of crucial Asian economies. Canberra Times, 20 October, p. 19.

 

The titles of press items that do not have an ascribed author should be listed in a footnote, not included in the reference list, and should be of the following form:

 

Aum victims' kin express anger. Asahi Shimbun, 30 June 2000, p. 21.

 

Some authors may wish to cite press items without bylines simply by an in-text reference such as (Asahi Shimbun, 30 June 2000, p. 21). For further guidance please contact the Editor.


Government and Official Publications

 

Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) (2008) Australia's Trade with East Asia (Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service).


Dissertations and Theses

 

Lao Bula, Dalomabi (2000) The role of communication in Meranao conflict resolution. Unpublished PhD thesis. Xavier University, The Philippines.


Websites

 

All citations of Internet websites should include the full URL and the date that it was accessed.

 

Mackie, Vera (2000) The metropolitan gaze: Travellers, bodies and spaces. Intersections 4. Available at http://wwwsshe.murdoch.edu.au/intersections/issue4/vera.html, accessed 31 May 2008.


Foreign language publications: use romanised book, journal and article titles in their original language. No translation is required.


Guidelines for the Romanisation of Asian Scripts

 

All non-English terms transcribed in roman script should be italicised in the text.


Chinese

 

All Asian Studies Review articles should use the pinyin system in transliterating Chinese terms and names -- for example, Beijing (not Peking) and Guangzhou (not Canton) -- with the exception of those names and terms that are still commonly rendered according to older romanisation systems, such as, Sun Yatsen, Chiang Kaishek, etc. Wherever necessary, an older spelling should be followed by the current pinyin romanisation in parentheses on the first occurrence, e.g. Chiang Kaishek (Jiang Jieshi). Do not hyphenate given names, for example: Zhou Enlai, not Zhou En-lai; Sun Yatsen, not Sun Yat-sen.


Japanese

 

Use the Hepburn system for the Romanisation of Japanese words.

 

Use macrons for long vowels.

 

Use n instead of m for all syllabic n/m (e.g., shinbun) and place an apostrophe between a syllabic n and a (semi-)vowel (e.g. Jun'ichiro; Ken'ichi; hon'yaku; kin'yu).

 

Italicise all Japanese terms, normally all in lower case (e.g. ryosai kenbo).

 

Proper nouns should not be italicised and their first letter should be capitalised (e.g. Shochiku Kagekidan).

 

Titles of Japanese books, journals, and articles should be italicised and written in lower case, except for proper nouns, whose first letter should be capitalised. (e.g. Mori Ogai zenshu).

 

Japanese names should generally be cited in Japanese order, i.e. surname first followed by given name, without a comma in between, including in bibliographical references. For example,

 

Kinoshita Kenjiro (1925) Bimi gushin (Tokyo: Keiseisha).

 

Authors of publications written in English under anglicised names, however, should be cited in the English order. For example, the author of Recontextualizing Texts: Narrative Performance in Modern Japanese Fiction should be referred to as Atsuko Sakaki in the text, but as Sakaki, Atsuko in the references, as follows:

 

Sakaki, Atsuko (1999) Recontextualizing texts: Narrative performance in modern Japanese fiction …


Korean

 

For the romanisation of Korean, authors may use either the McCune-Reischauer Romanisation System or the Revised Romanisation of Korean (South Korean Ministry of Culture and Tourism, 2000). However, authors, must use one or the other of these two systems consistently and correctly, and not mix use of the two systems in their article. In citing Korean author's names in bibliographies, no comma should separate the family name from the given name if the text is in Korean. However, a comma should separate the surname from the given name if the text is in English.


Thai

 

There is no generally agreed system of representing Thai in roman script, and all current systems have some limitations. The Asian Studies Review follows a modified version of the Royal Institute system. This system makes no distinction between long and short vowel forms; and tones are not represented. We differ slightly from the Royal Institute system as follows: "j" is used for the Thai consonant "jor jan", not "ch"; and “eu”, “eua”, “euay” (not “ue”, “uea”, “ueay”) are used for these vowels and diphthongs. Dashes are used to separate the units of Thai compound expressions that are translated as a single term in English, such as khwam-pen-thai for "Thainess".

 

We follow the Thai norm of referring to Thai authors by given names, not surnames, and all citations by Thai authors should alphabetised in the bibliography and elsewhere by given names. The full names of Thai authors -- given name and surname – should be cited at first reference, with subsequent references using only the given name: for example: Khukrit Pramoj (first reference); Khukrit (subsequent references). We follow Thai authors' preferred spelling of their own names in English when this is known, even if such spellings are not consistent with modified Royal Institute system; for example: “Sulak Sivaraksa”, not “Sulak Siwarak”; “Surapong Phinijkhar”, not “Suraphong Phinitkha”.


Single Book Reviews and Review Essays

 

In recognition of the rapid expansion in academic publishing on Asia, the Asian Studies Review has appointed dedicated Reviews Editors for each region and theme. The Reviews Editors will coordinate the processing of book reviews and review essays for their respective regions and themes. The Asian Studies Review does not accept unsolicited book reviews or review essays and these style guide notes are intended to assist authors who have been invited to review a book or who have been commissioned to prepare a review essay.


Style for Single Book Reviews


At the Head of the Book Review:

Author's full name, personal name first, in capitals

Title of book in italics & bold

Place of publication, publisher, year of publication, number of pages, price, hard or soft cover - ordinary type, not bold


Text of the Book Review:

No indentation of first line of paragraph

Double line space between paragraphs

Right justified margin

Single spaced


Reviewer's Data:

Your full name in capitals

Your university affiliation

Your email address - all on right hand side


Length:

500-800 words (reviews longer than 800 words will be returned to be edited down)


References:

Should be kept to a minimum


Turnaround time:

10 weeks, from receipt of book to providing review to ASR.


Review Essays

 

Background: A review essay is a significant piece of academic work that critically engages the arguments and analyses of a range of recently published books in terms of key debates and issues in a particular field of scholarly inquiry about modern Asia. A review essay is more than a summation of several discrete book reviews. It constitutes a framing essay that is fully referenced and gives readers insight into the ways in which the books considered contribute to the current state of a given disciplinary field, thematic investigation, or area of inquiry. In many academic settings a review essay is regarded as equivalent to a journal article in terms of quantitative metric data collection and assessment. 

 

Review essays in the Asian Studies Review will usually consider between three and six recently published books, and be between 4,000 and 5,000 words in length, including all notes and references. The style of a review essay will be the same as that for other articles and authors should consult the style guide for contributors. Review essays will have a title, which should be followed by the reviewer's name and university affiliation, following the style for individual articles contained in these Guidelines. Details of the books under consideration should appear immediately below the title and reviewer details (for layout see the guidelines for single book reviews).

 

All commissioned review essays will be peer reviewed and will need to be of the same high standard as general articles in order to be accepted for publication in the journal. An invitation to contribute a review essay does not guarantee that the essay will be published in the journal.

 

Review essays should be submitted electronically via Manuscript Central.


Guidelines for Special Issues

 

The Asian Studies Review is keen to receive proposals for topical special issues of several essays on the same theme or subject. The total word length of all essays in a proposed special issue, including any introductory essay by the guest editor(s), should be no more than 55,000 words. The number and length of individual contributions within a special issue may vary, but no single essay should total more than 10,000 words, including all notes and references. 

 

Proposals for special issues should include:

A draft introductory essay by the guest editor(s) outlining the significance of the themes and issues covered and demonstrating the intellectual coherence of the various contributions in relation to those themes and issues.

A complete set of the proposed articles, including abstracts and keywords. Contributions should conform to the journal's house style, details of which can be found in the “Information for Authors” section of this website. 

When a proposal is accepted by the Review's editorial board, the guest editors will usually work in collaboration with the Editor in Chief and the relevant regional or thematic editor to determine appropriate referees where relevant.

The responsibilities of the guest editor(s) will be determined for each special issue in consultation with the journal's Editor in Chief, but in general will include:

Soliciting and checking articles for inclusion in the special issue.

Consulting with the Editor in Chief or relevant regional or thematic editor to determine referees for each article to meet the requirements of the journal's double-blind peer review process.

Undertaking the majority of contributor liaison, including advising authors of review outcomes and necessary revisions.

Checking revised articles for quality and to ensure that authors have addressed referee concerns.

Editing articles and ensuring that they generally comply with the house style. Final copy-editing and proofing of the issue will be undertaken by members of the editorial team and the assistant editor, but it is the responsibility of the guest editor to ensure the overall quality and consistent formatting of articles.

Providing an introductory essay for the special issue.

Supplying a one-paragraph biographical note for the guest editors and each contributor to the special issue, as well as full contact details for each contributor.

Upon publication, the name(s) of the guest editor(s) will appear on the inside front cover of the journal.

Guidelines for Images, Tables and Figures

 

Images should have direct relevance to the text of the article in which they appear, as and a general rule will be limited to a maximum of 5 per article. In cases where a larger number of images is required to support the argument of a particular article, the length of the article may need to be reduced accordingly.

 

Where possible, images should be submitted as individual .jpg (or .gif) files. Images should have a minimum resolution of 300dpi, but 500dpi is optimal.

 

The text of the article should clearly indicate where each image should appear. Captions and sources should be provided for all images, and it is the responsibility of individual article authors to obtain copyright permissions where necessary.

 

All images will appear in black and white in the printed version of the journal, but colour images will be reproduced in colour in the online version.

 

All tables and figures should be provided in a separate file, and should include a heading and source details. Again, the text of the article should clearly indicate where each table/figure should be inserted.

Style Inquiries

 

If you have any inquiries about the matters detailed above please contact the Editor in Chief, Peter Jackson, at: asr.editor@anu.edu.au


Proofs will be sent to the main author with full instructions. They should be corrected and returned Taylor & Francis within three days. Major alterations to the text cannot be accepted.


Free article access: Corresponding authors can receive 50 free reprints, free online access to their article through Taylor & Francis Online and a complimentary copy of the issue containing their article. Complimentary reprints are available through Rightslink® and additional reprints can be ordered through Rightslink® when proofs are received. If you have any queries, please contact our reprints department at reprints@tandf.co.uk


Copyright.  It is a condition of publication that authors assign copyright or license the publication rights in their articles, including abstracts, to Taylor & Francis. This enables us to ensure full copyright protection and to disseminate the article, and of course the Journal, to the widest possible readership in print and electronic formats as appropriate. Authors retain many rights under the Taylor & Francis rights policies, which can be found at http://journalauthors.tandf.co.uk/preparation/copyright.asp. Authors are themselves responsible for obtaining permission to reproduce copyright material from other sources.


Editorial Board

Editor In Chief:

Peter Jackson -  Australian National University

 

Assistant Editor:

Anne Platt - University of Queensland

 

Editorial Assistant:

Carolyn Brewer - Australian National University


Regional and Thematic Editors:

 

Transnational Asia:

Mark McLelland - University of Wollongong


Transnational Asia Book Reviews Editor:
Claire Lowrie - University of Newcastle

 

Diasporic Asia:

Jacquie Lo - Australian National University

 

Diasporic Asia Book Reviews Editor:

Tseen Khoo - Monash University
Dean Chan - Edith Cowan University

 

China:
Jim Leibold - La Trobe University

China Book Reviews Editor:
Yiyan Wang - University of Sydney
 

Japan:
Tomoko Aoyama - University of Queensland

 

Japan Book Reviews Editor:

Christine de Matos - University of Wollongong

 

Korea:

Greg Evon - University of New South Wales


Southeast Asia:
Mina Roces - University of New South Wales

 

Southeast Asia Book Reviews Editor:

Jean Gelman Taylor - University of New South Wales


South, West and Central Asia:
Devleena Ghosh - University of Technology, Sydney

 

South, West and Central Asia Book Reviews Editor:

Ursula Rao - University of New South Wales


Advisory Board:


Tim Allender - University of Sydney
Pam Allen - University of Tasmania
Chris Berry - Goldsmiths College, University of London
Susan Blackburn - Monash University
Joseph Cheng - City University of Hong Kong
Helen Creese - University of Queensland
Robert Cribb - Australian National University
Arif Dirlik - Chinese University of Hong Kong

Louise Edwards - University of Hong Kong
Bob Elson - University of Queensland
Stephanie Donald - RMIT University
Leila Gandhi - University of Chicago
Nanette Gottlieb - University of Queensland
Helen Hardacre - Harvard University
Ariel Heryanto - Australian National University
Paul Hutchcroft - Australian National University
Bruce Jacobs - Monash University
O. Yul Kwon - Griffith University
Kam Louie - University of Hong Kong  

Vera Mackie - Wollongong University
Jim Masselos - University of Sydney
Lyn Parker - University of Western Australia
Kalpana Ram - Macquarie University
Tony Reid - Australian National University
Abdullah Saeed - University of Melbourne
Krishna Sen - University of Western Australia
Sanjay Seth - Goldsmiths College, University of London
Philip Taylor - Australian National University
Adrian Vickers - University of Sydney
Wang Gungwu - National University of Singapore
Mayfair Yang - University of California, Santa Barbara




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