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期刊名称:INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF SOCIAL HISTORY

ISSN:0020-8590
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, 32 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS, NEW YORK, USA, NY, 10013-2473
  出版社网址:http://www.cambridge.org/us/
期刊网址:http://journals.cambridge.org/jid_ISH
主题范畴:HISTORY

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



About the journal

International Review of Social History attempts to combine theoretical innovation with thorough research. The oldest scholarly journal of its kind, it is distinguished for the quality, depth and originality of its articles. It also publishes book reviews, a bibliography of social history titles, and an annual supplement of specially commissioned essays on a current topic.

The International Review of Social History (IRSH) is one of the leading journals in its field. The oldest scholarly journal of its kind, it is distinguished for the quality, depth and originality of its articles. The journal is issued by the International Institute of Social History (IISH), and published by Cambridge University Press. Three issues are published each year, in April, August, and December, plus an annual supplement of specially commissioned essays on a current topic, also published in December. The IRSH aims to publish some twenty articles each year and to cover a major part of the books published in the field of social and labour history in its Book Reviews and annotated Bibliography.
Approximately one article in four submitted is accepted for publication. The editorial board endeavours to reach a decision on submitted articles within six months, and to publish accepted contributions within a year of acceptance. All articles are refereed before acceptance. Reviews are normally published within six months from receipt. On acceptance, the executive editor will give an approximate date of publication. He reserves the right to change that date at short notice, owing to space constraints and the need to achieve an appropriate balance of content in each issue.

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About the journal
review of social history.pdf

Instructions to Authors

Submission
Submission of an article is taken to imply that it has not previously been published and is not being considered for publication elsewhere. Authors are also asked to provide brief details of any book they are publishing which includes all or part of a submitted article.
Contributors will be asked to complete a form assigning copyright (on certain conditions) to Cambridge University Press. This helps ensure maximum protection against unauthorized use, and helps ensure that requests to reproduce contributions are handled effectively. As contributor you retain the right among others to reproduce the paper or an adapted version of it in any volume of which you are editor or author. Permission will automatically be given to the publisher of such a volume, subject to normal acknowledge-ments. For further information see the instructions on the copyright form.
Contributors are responsible for obtaining permission to reproduce any material in which they do not hold the copyright and for ensuring that the appropriate acknowledgements are included in the typescript, including the illustration materials. In quoting from copyright material, contributors should keep in mind that the rule of thumb for "fair use"confines direct quotation to a maximum of 200 words.
An article should be submitted in two versions (preferably by email). One version containing the author's details, the other anonymized as far as possible, in order to facilitate "blind" refereeing. They should include an abstract not exceeding 150 words, specifying the principal conclusion and methods in the context of currently accepted views on the subject. Should email facilities not be available, the article can be sent on disk to:
International Review of Social History
International Institute of Social History
Cruquiusweg 31 1019 AT Amsterdam
fax: +31 20 665 41 81
e-mail:
irsh@iisg.nl
Digital file: The file should be saved as: Rich Text Format (Interchange Format in some programmes) or some recent version of MSWord for Windows or WordPerfect. However, the publisher reserves the right to typeset material by conventional means if an author’s soft copy proves unsatisfactory.
Length of Contributions: Articles must preferably not exceed 10,000 words.


Manuscript Preparation
Manuscripts should be in English (or American English). In cases where no English text can be provided, authors should always contact the executive editor before submitting an article.
Keep the title of the article short and plainly descriptive.
The document's format should be double-spaced, A4-size (i.e. 21 x 29.7 centimetres, or 8.27"x 11.67", with margins of at least 3 centimetres. Be sure to paginate.
The text should not be right-justified, i.e. they should have a ragged right margin.
Notes must also be double-spaced. When you are not using endnote or footnote commands of your word processor to create copy for notes, the notes should be placed at the end of the article and not at the bottom of the page. When using commands of your word processor to create copy for notes, please use endnotes. Notes should be confined, as far as possible, to necessary references: an excessive number of notes is distracting to the reader and can arouse the suspicion that the aim is to display erudition, not impart information.
Do not use automatic hyphenation.
Paragraph breaks should be indicated by indents and not line breaks. The first paragraph of an article, and of sections, should not be indented. If you are including tables, graphs or illustrations, note the following. Fine copy must be provided separately; number in sequence throughout the article; references to sources and descriptive headings must be attached; indicate clearly where the material is to appear in the text; ensure that there is a reference to it in the text; permission to duplicate copyright material must be obtained.
Major articles should be divided into sections; sections should emphasize the structure of the argument. They should be marked by short titles of no more than fifty key strokes. Sub-sections should likewise be marked by short titles. Avoid numbering and avoid further levels of division.When submitting the definitive version of an accepted article ensure that you have provided the following:
1. A heading that includes, on separate lines, the title, and the author's name.
2. An abstract of no more than 150 words, in a single paragraph.
3. The correspondence address (including an e-mail address, if available) you would like to be printed in the Notes on Contributors.


Text Conventions
The following paragraphs indicate the text and typographical conventions of the International Review of Social History. It is essential that contributors observe the journal's stylistic conventions closely. If not, their article may be returned for amendment. It is essential, therefore, that authors should ensure that their manuscripts, once accepted for publication, are in all respects ready to go to press. All corrections and alterations to contributions at proof stage (apart from the correction of misprints due to an error of the typesetters) are extremely expensive, and may be charged to authors.
Effective Prose: Authors should make their prose as effective as possible. The following problems often turn up: mixed metaphors; wandering tenses; excessive use of jargon or neologisms unfamiliar to the average reader; unnecessary use of "it is" "there is" and "the fact that" excessive use of nouns as adjectives; use of empty words such as "factor" "espect" "element" and "manifestation" instead of exact words required by the context.
Quotations: Follow the punctuation, capitalization and spelling of the original. For short quotations use double quotation marks (except that quotations within quotations take single quotation marks). Long quotations of fifty words or more should be typed as a displayed extract, i.e. a separate block with a space above and below, double spaced, without quotation marks. Punctuation follows closing quotation marks except where whole sentences are quoted. Note that superscript numbers follow punctuation.
Ellipsis in Quotations: use three full points in square brackets. For instance: 'abbreviations should be [...] consistent throughout.Note that there are no spaces between the full points or between the points and the brackets.
Spelling should be consistent throughout. British English and American English are both allowed but one of these two forms should be applied throughout the article. When using British English please note the following preferences:
-ize   elite (no accent)   practise (verb)
-zation   inquiry   premise
acknowledgement   focused   reflection
ageing   fulfil   regime
analyse   indexes   role (no accent)
appendixes   judgement   sceptic/sceptical
connection   mould   cooperate
practice (noun)   dispatch
Note especially the use of -ize rather than -ise.
Masculine Form: Turns of phrase using masculine forms as universals are not acceptable
(e.g. "the historian and his problems".
Abbreviations and Acronyms should be easily identifiable and consistent throughout. The following standard abbreviations are used:
f. ff. (= the following page(s)), fo. (= folio), ed., vol.
But: 2nd edn, eds, fos (= folios), Dr, Mr, St, vols (i.e. without points these are contractions where the abbreviation ends with the last letter of the word). Provide an explanation for any acronym or unusual abbreviations at the first mention, e.g.: Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO), Sozialistische Partei Deutschlands (SPD). Initials in personal names retain points, e.g.: G.A. Smith. Note that in IRSH style there is no space between initials in personal names.                                                                                                                                                                                                  Dates should be typed without commas as follows: 5 July 1985. In referring to a century use the form: twentieth century. Note that when used as an adjective a hyphen appears between the ordinal and the word "century" e.g.; nineteenth-century labour.    Figures and Numerals: units of measurement and all numbers over 100 should be given in figures; others should be in words (e.g. ten schools, twenty-five countries) ?except in passages where many statistics are discussed and it is obviously desirable to use figures.     Titles Cited in the Text: titles of books and journals should be italicized; do not use quotation marks. Use double quotation marks if naming a part of a book, an individual contribution to a volume or an article in a journal.    Foreign Words and Phrases: should be italicized, except when they are naturalized. E.g. fabricant, Festschrift, but: bona fide, status quo, vis-vis. Exception to this rule are foreign addresses, which are not italicized. Note especially the naturalized forms for: emigr and ancien régime. When using foreign words and phrases, please check and double check the spelling, especially when it is not your first language.       Punctuation: The serial comma is preferred (Marx, Engels, and Kautsky rather than Marx, Engels and Kautsky ). The possessive "s" following an "s"is preferred (Phillips's rather than Phillips. Round brackets are used for brackets within brackets; square brackets are used for interpolation within quoted matter.
Italicization and Emphasis should be used sparingly. Bold type should be avoided altogether and underlining is never used.


References
Notes should be placed at the end of the article and not at the bottom of the page. Do not use endnote or footnote commands to create copy for notes. Copy so created is very hard to edit at a later stage.
Note that the Harvard system of citing author and year in the text amplified by a list of references is never used in the IRSH.
Unnumbered Initial Note. A note containing acknowledgements should be an unnumbered initial note. A superscript asterisk should be placed at the end of the title accordingly. The unnumbered note should contain any reference to previous forms of the article (an address delivered, for example) and any acknowledgements (of the assistance of colleagues and of grants from foundations).
Explanatory Notes: notes are primarily for the citation of sources. Use explanatory notes only for those items of detail that would otherwise interrupt the flow of your argument or for those highly technical qualifications that would be of interest or use only to a very few scholars.
First References
First references to books and articles are to be punctuated and capitalized as in the following examples:
Article
Neville Kirk, "In Defence of Class: A Critique of Recent Revisionist Writing upon the Nineteenth-Century English Working Class"  International Review of Social History, 32 (1987), pp. 2-47.
and: Markus Wehner, "Archivreform bei leeren Kassen. Einige Anmerkungen zur politischen und ökonomischen Situation der russischen Archiven" Osteuropa, 44 (1994), pp. 105-124.
and: Jean-Paul Couthéoux, "Les pouvoirs économiques et sociaux dans un secteur industriel: La sidérurgie" Revue d'histoire économique et sociale, 38 (1960), pp. 339-376.
Book Michael Poole, Theories of Trade Unionism: A Sociology of Industrial Relations (London etc., 1981), pp. 18-30.
Multi-Volume Work Franco Venturi, Settecento riformatore: La caduta dell  Antico Regime (1776-1789), 2 vols (Turin, 1984), I, p. 203.
Essay in Collection
Yves Lequin, "Apprenticeship in Nineteenth-Century France. A Continuing Tradition or a Break with the Past"  in Steven Laurence Kaplan and Cynthia J. Koepp (eds), Work in France: Representations, Meaning, Organization, and Practice (Ithaca, NY etc., 1986), pp. 457-474.
Multi-Authored or Edited Work Peter Armstrong et al., White Collar Workers, Trade Unions and Class (London etc., 1986), pp. 87
93.
Thesis or Dissertation
H.F. Gospel, "employers" Organisations: Their Growth and Function in the British System of Industrial Relations in the Period 1918-39(Ph.D., London School of Economics, 1974), pp. 15-20 [hereafter, “Employers' Organisations 1918-39”].
Please note the following: always include inclusive page numbers in references to articles, and essays in collections, also if you are referring to one specific page. When referring to a specific page within an article or an essay in a collection, this page number directly follows after the inclusive page number, separated by a comma, as in the following example:
Neville Kirk, "In Defence of Class: A Critique of Recent Revisionist Writing upon the Nineteenth-Century English Working Class? International Review of Social History, 32 (1987), pp. 2-47, 15.
Also note the following:

Instructions to Authors
International review of social history.pdf

Editorial Board

Executive Editor

  • Professor Marcel van der Linden
  • Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis
    Cruquiusweg 31
    1019 AT Amsterdam
    The Netherlands
  • irsh@iisg.nl

Managing Editor

  • Mr Aad Blok
  • Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis
    Cruquiusweg 31
    1019 AT Amsterdam
    The Netherlands
  • irsh@iisg.nl

Editorial Assistant

  • Ms Angèle Janse
  • Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis, The Netherlands
  • irsh@iisg.nl

Editorial Committee

  • Ellen Bal
  • Vrije Universiteit, The Netherlands
  • Dennis Bos
  • Universiteit Groningen, The Netherlands
  • Jan-Bart Gewald
  • Afrika Studiecentrum, The Netherlands
  • Marjolein 't Hart
  • Universiteit van Amsterdam, The Netherlands
  • Karin Hofmeester
  • Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis, The Netherlands
  • Marco van Leeuwen
  • Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis, The Netherlands
  • Ratna Saptari
  • Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis, The Netherlands
  • Ariadne Schmidt
  • Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis, The Netherlands



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