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期刊名称:SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE

ISSN:1862-4065
出版频率:Bi-monthly
出版社:SPRINGER JAPAN KK, SHIROYAMA TRUST TOWER 5F, 4-3-1 TORANOMON, MINATO-KU, TOKYO, JAPAN, 105-6005
  出版社网址:http://www.springer.com/?SGWID=8-102-0-0-0
影响因子:6.367
主题范畴:GREEN & SUSTAINABLE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY;    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES

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



About the journal

Sustainability Science probes interactions between global, social, and human systems, the complex mechanisms that lead to degradation of these systems, and concomitant risks to human well-being. The journal provides a platform for building sustainability science as a new academic discipline which can point the way to a sustainable global society by facing challenges that existing disciplines have not addressed. These include endeavors to simultaneously understand phenomena and solve problems, uncertainty and application of the precautionary principle, the co-evolution of knowledge and recognition of problems, and trade-offs between global and local problem solving.

The journal promotes science-based predictions and impact assessments of global change, and seeks ways to ensure that these can be understood and accepted by society. Sustainability Science creates a transdisciplinary academic structure and discovery process that fuses the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities.

Abstracted/Indexed in:

Academic OneFile, AGRICOLA, Current Contents/ Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences, EMBiology, Gale, Google Scholar, Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition, OCLC, Science Citation Index Expanded (SciSearch), SCOPUS, Summon by Serial Solutions


Instructions to Authors

General

"Sustainability Science" is the official English language journal of the Integrated Research System for Sustainability Science of the University of Tokyo (IR3S) and the United Nations University (UNU), publishing original articles, review articles, overview articles, technical reports, case reports, and notes and comments on sustainability science.Editorial Officeï¼?/SPAN>sust@unu.edu

 

Types of articles

Original articles are on theoretical or methodological advances in research that integrate inquiry in various disciplines to improve understanding of sustainability science itself and its application to specific sustainability challenges.

Review articles consider the implications and lessons to be learned, including the need for future inquiry, from a body of research on any sustainability topic.

Overview articles provide timely assessments, general observations and insights from experts on strategies to advance global sustainability. Overview articles are usually commissioned by the Editor-in-Chief, but may be submitted unsolicited for consideration.

Technical reports are on results of research into specific areas of concern, including the results of mathematical modeling, survey research, and field studies.

Case reports provide insights into contemporary sustainability problems and increase understanding of such problems and their international implications.

Notes and comments are concise commentaries from those interested in sustainability science. Comments on published papers are included but should be fair and sensible in subject and style.

 

 

Manuscript submission

Authors should submit their manuscripts online. Electronic submission substantially reduces the editorial processing and reviewing times and shortens overall publication times. Please follow the hyperlink “Submit online�on the right and upload all of your manuscript files following the instructions given on the screen.

 

Legal requirements

The author(s) guarantee(s) that the manuscript will not be published elsewhere in any language without the consent of IR3S, United Nations University and Springer, that the rights of third parties will not be violated, and that the publisher will not be held legally responsible should there be any claims for compensation. Authors wishing to include figures or text passages that have already been published elsewhere are required to obtain permission from the copyright owner(s) of the material and to include evidence that such permission has been granted when submitting their papers. Any material received without such evidence will be assumed to originate from the authors.The "Copyright Transfer Statement" should be submitted to the publisher together with the corrected proofs. The form is included in the proofs authors receive.

 

Manuscript preparation

All manuscripts submitted to the journal must comply with these instructions. Failure to do so will result in the return of the manuscript and a possible delay in publication. Manuscripts should be written so that they are intelligible to the professional reader who is not a specialist in the particular field. All manuscripts are subject to peer review, and accepted papers will be copyedited. Manuscripts must be written in English and typed in double-line spacing with 3-cm margins; pages should be numbered using the automatic numbering function of the word-processing program. Authors whose first language is not English are urged to have their manuscript read by a colleague who is a native English speaker and is familiar with their field of work before submitting the paper. The manuscript should be arranged as follows:

Title page (including name(s) of author(s), a concise and informative title, affiliation(s) and address(es) of the author(s), e-mail address, telephone and fax numbers of the corresponding author.)

Abstract (about 250 words for an original article, a review article, and an overview article, and about 100 words for a technical report, a case report, and notes and comments.)

Up to six keywords

Text of the paper, divided into the following sections, if appropriate: Introduction; Materials and methods; Results; Discussion; Conclusions; Acknowledgments; References; tables; figure legends

Abbreviations should be defined at first mention in the abstract and again in the main body of the text and used consistently thereafter.

 

References

The list of References should include only works that are cited in the text and that have been published or accepted for publication. Personal communications should be mentioned only in the text. If available, the Digital Object Identifier (DOI) can be added at the end of the reference in question.In the text, references should be cited by author and year (e.g., Hammer 1994; Hammer and Sjöqvist 1995; Hammer et al. 1993) and listed in alphabetical order in the reference list. If there is more than one work by the same author or team of authors in the same year, a, b, etc. should be added to the year both in the text and in the list of references. *Journal papers: name(s) and initial(s) of all authors; year; full title; journal title; volume number; first and last page numbers

Example:May MO, Tilman K, Wiliams R (2005) Restoration of sound ecosystems in the traditional rural landscapes. Landscape Ecol Eng 1:3�5

If available, the DOI of the cited literature should be added at the end of the reference in question.

Example: Das BK (2003) Environmental pollution impact on water and sediments of Kumaun lakes, Lesser Himalaya, India: a comparative study. Environ Geol 49:230�39. DOI 10.1007/s00254-005-0077-0

A paper published online but not yet in print can be cited using the DOI.

Example: Banai R (2005) Land resource sustainability for urban development: spatial decision support system prototype. Environ Manage. DOI 10.1007/s00267-004-1047-0

*Single contributions in a book: name(s) and initial(s) of all authors; year; title of article; editor(s); title of book; edition; volume number; publisher; place of publication; page numbers

Example: Komiyama H, Osawa T (2004) Global sustainability and the role of Asia. In: Sasaki T (ed) Nature and human communities, Springer, Tokyo, pp 187�16

*Book: name and initial(s) of all authors; year; title; publisher; place of publication

Example: Bailey RG (1996) Ecosystem geography. Springer, Berlin Heidelberg New York

 

 

Tables and figures

All figures (photographs, graphs, or diagrams) and tables should be cited in the text, and each should be numbered consecutively throughout with arabic numerals.

Tables must be numbered consecutively with arabic numerals. They should have a title explaining any abbreviation used in that table. Footnotes to tables should be indicated by superscript lowercase letters (or asterisks for significance values and other statistical data).

Illustrations must be restricted to the minimum needed to clarify the text. All figures (photographs, graphs or diagrams) should be cited in the text and numbered consecutively throughout. Figure parts should be identified by lowercase roman letters (a, b, etc.). If illustrations are supplied with uppercase labeling, lowercase letters will still be used in the figure legends and citations.

Figure legends must be brief, self-sufficient explanations of the illustrations. The legends should be placed at the end of the text.

Files for production should be prepared following the instructions below. Files for initial submission can be in different formats.Submit all figures as separate files and do not integrate them within the text. The preferred figure formats are EPS (Encapsulated Postscript) for vector graphics exported from a drawing program and TIFF for halftone illustrations. EPS files must always contain a preview in TIFF of the figure. Microsoft PowerPoint files and illustrations embedded in Microsoft Word documents are not acceptable. The file name should include the figure number.

Line drawings. Inscriptions should be legible, with initial uppercase letters and appropriately scaled to the size of the drawing. Scanned line drawings should be digitized with a resolution of 800 dpi relative to the final figure size.

Halftone illustrations (black and white and color). Magnification should be indicated by scale bars. For scanned halftone illustrations, a resolution of 300 dpi is usually sufficient.

Color illustrations will always be published in color in the online version. In print, however, they will appear in color only if the author agrees to make a contribution (¥110,000 for the first page and ¥60,000 for each additional page) to printing costs. Please note that, in such cases, it is authors�responsibility to prepare figures to be illustrative enough to convey the necessary information even after they are converted into black and white. For online, color illustrations appear in RGB as provided, and for printing they are converted to CMYK. Please note that colors of the images may appear less vivid in the printed journal due to the difference in the color mode.

Size of figures. The figures, including legends, should match either the column width (86 mm) or the print area of 176 × 234 mm. The publisher reserves the right to reduce or enlarge illustrations.

The manuscripts and the figures will not normally be returned, unless specifically requested by the authors.

Technical instructions (pdf, 147 Kb)

 

Electronic Supplementary Material

Electronic Supplementary Material (ESM) for a paper will be published in the electronic edition of the journal, provided the material is submitted in electronic form together with the manuscript accepted after peer review.ESM may consist of:

information that cannot be printed: animations, video clips, sound recordings (use QuickTime, .avi, .mpeg, animated GIFs, or any other common file format)

information that is more convenient in electronic form: sequences, spectral data, etc.

large quantities of original data that relate to the paper, e.g., additional tables, large numbers of illustrations (color and black and white), etc.

Legends must be brief, self-sufficient explanations of the ESM. ESM is to be numbered and referred to as S1, S2, etc.After acceptance for publication, ESM will be published as received from the author in the online version only. A reference will be given in the printed version.

 

Proof reading

Authors are informed by e-mail that a temporary URL has been created from which they can obtain their proofs. Proofreading is the responsibility of the author. Authors should make their proof corrections (formal corrections only) on a printout of the pdf file supplied, checking that the text is complete and that all figures and tables are included. Substantial changes in content, e.g., new results, corrected values, title and authorship, are not allowed without the approval of Editor-in-Chief. In such a case please contact Editor-in-Chief and the Editorial Office before returning the proofs to the publisher. After online publication, corrections can be made only in exceptional cases and in the form of an erratum, which will be hyperlinked to the paper.

 

Online First

Papers will be published online about one week after receipt of the corrected proofs. Papers published online can already be cited by their DOI. After release of the printed version, the paper can also be cited by issue and page numbers.

 

Offprintss

If you wish to order offprints you must return the order form that is provided with the proofs and return it together with the corrected proofs.

 

Open Choice Publication

In addition to the normal publication process (whereby an article is submitted to the journal and access to that article is granted to customers who have purchased a subscription), Springer now provides an alternative publishing option: Springer Open Choice. A Springer Open Choice article receives all the benefits of a regular “subscription-based�article, but in addition is made available publicly through Springer's online platform, SpringerLink. To publish via Springer Open Choice, upon acceptance please visit www.springer.com/openchoice to complete the relevant order form and provide the required payment information. Payment must be received in full before publication or articles will be published as regular subscription-model articles. We regret that Springer Open Choice cannot be ordered for published articles.


Editorial Board

Editor-in-Chief

Kazuhiko Takeuchi, The University of Tokyo, United Nations University (UNU), Japan
(Landscape Ecology and Planning)

Editorial Advisors

Braden Allenby, Arizona State University, USA
(Civil and Environmental Engineering)

William Ascher, Claremont McKenna College, USA
(Government and Economics)

Garry Brewer, Yale University, USA
(Resource Policy and Management)

William C. Clark, Harvard University, USA
(Environment, Development and Security)

Peter Edwards, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Switzerland
(Environmental Sciences)

Jim Falk, University of Melbourne, Australia
(Environmental Management and Rehabilitation)

Carl Folke, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden
(Systems Ecology)

Edwin A. Gyasi, University of Ghana, Ghana
(Geography and Resource Development)

Keisuke Hanaki, The University of Tokyo, Japan
(Urban Engineering)

Mikiko Kainuma, National Institute for Environmental Studies (NIES), Japan
(Climate Change)

Nobuo Mimura, Ibaraki University, Japan
(Coastal Management)

Takashi Mino, The University of Tokyo, Japan
(Wastewater Engineering, Sustainability Education)

Mitsuru Osaki, Hokkaido University, Japan
(Agriculture Science)

Govindan Parayil, UNU-Institute for Advanced Studies (IAS), Japan
(Science, Technology and Innovation)

Francis Petersen, University of Cape Town, South Africa
(Engineering and the Built Environment)

Joan B. Rose, Michigan State University, USA
(Microbial Risk Assessment)

Leena Srivastava, The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI), India
(Climate Change)

Jeffrey I. Steinfeld, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA
(Atmospheric Science, Sustainable Education)

Akimasa Sumi, The University of Tokyo, Japan
(Climate Modeling)

Kazuhiro Ueta, Kyoto University, Japan
(Environmental Economics)

Peter A. Wilderer, European Academy of Sciences and Arts, Germany
(Water Quality Engineering)

Gang Yu, Tsinghua University, China
(Environmental Science and Engineering)

Managing Editor

Fukuya Iino, UNU-Institute for Sustainability and Peace (ISP), Japan
(Environmental Management)

Editors

Zafar Adeel, UNU-International Network on Water, Environment and Health (INWEH), Canada
(Water Management in Developing Countries)

David T. Allen, University of Texas at Austin, USA
(Chemical Engineering)

Didac Ferrer-Balas, Technical University of Catalonia, Spain
(Sustainability in Higher Education)

Nasir El Bassam, International Research Centre for Renewable Energy (IFEED), Germany
(Renewable Energy Technologies and Rural Development)

Luiz Di Bernardo, University of São Paulo, Brazil
(Hydrology)

Cris Brack, Waiariki Institute of Technology, New Zealand
(Forestry, Greenhouse Gas Monitoring and Assessment)

Ronald D. Brunner, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
(Political Science)

Stephen R. Connors, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA
(Energy and Environment)

David Dawe, Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), Thailand
(Food Policy)

Thomas Elmqvist, Stockholm University, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden
(Systems Ecology)

Robert Fisher, University of Sydney, Australia
(Social and Political Aspects of Resource Management)

Conbin Fu, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
(Institute of Atmospheric Physics)

Hans-Martin Fussel, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Germany
(Climate Change Adaptation)

Kensuke Fukushi, The University of Tokyo, Japan
(Environmental Engineering, Risk Management)

Hideo Harasawa, Cabinet Office, Government of Japan, Japan
(Environment and Energy Policy)

John E. Hay, Ibaraki University, Japan
(Climate Change Science and Policy)

Srikantha Herath, UNU-Institute for Sustainability and Peace (ISP), Japan
(Hydrology and Water Resources Engineering)

Eiji Hosoda, Keio University, Japan
(Environmental Economics)

Amal Kar, Central Arid Zone Research Institute (CAZRI), India
(Division of Natural Resources and Environment)

Joanne Kauffman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) (Retired), France
(Global Environmental Politics)

Toshio Koike, The University of Tokyo, Japan
(Remote Sensing, Hydrological Processes)

Zhong Ma, Renmin University, China
(Natural Resource Economics)

Akira Maeda, Kyoto University, Japan
(Energy Economics)

Peter Marcotullio, Hunter College, USA
(Urban Planning)

Toshihiko Masui, National Institute for Environmental Studies (NIES), Japan
(Social and Environmental Systems)

Ruth Matthias, University of Maryland, USA
(Environmental Policy)

Karel F. Mulder, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
(Innovation, Sustainable Development)

Masafumi Nagao, UNU-Institute for Sustainability and Peace (ISP), International Christian University (ICU), Japan
(International Cooperation and Education)

Tatsuo Omura, Tohoku University, Japan
(Civil and Environmental Engineering)

Kazuyoshi Okazawa, Japan Environmental Safety Corporation (JESCO), Japan
(Sustainable Development Policies)

Fabio Orecchini, University of Rome "La Sapienza", Interuniversity Research Centre for Sustainable Development, Italy
(Energy and the Environment)

Rosa T. Perez, Manila Observatory, Philippines
(Meteorology and Climate Change)

Vesselin Popovski, UNU-Institute for Sustainability and Peace (ISP), Japan
(Peace and Security)

John R. Porter, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
(Agriculture and Ecology)

Golam Rabbani, Bangladesh Centre for Advanced Studies (BCAS), Bangladesh
(Climate Change Adaptation)

Fabrice Renaud, UNU-Institute for Environment and Human Security (EHS), Germany
(Environmental Vulnerability and Energy Security)

Tatsuyoshi Saijo, Osaka University, Japan
(Institutional Design Engineering)

Jin Sato, The University of Tokyo, Japan
(International Studies and Environmental Policy)

Yasunobu Sato, The University of Tokyo, Japan
(International Relations, Law, Dispute Resolution)

Victor Savage, National University of Singapore, Singapore
(Sustainable Urban Development)

Takamitsu Sawa, Ritsumeikan University, Japan
(Policy Science)

Minjun Shi, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
(Environmental and Spatial Economics)

Mannava V. K. Sivakumar, World Meteorological Organization (WMO), Switzerland
(Agroclimatology)

Luc Soete, UNU-Maastricht Economic and Social Research and Training Centre on Innovation and Technology (MERIT), The Netherlands
(Economics, Innovation, and Technology)

Will Steffen, Australian National University, Australia
(Earth System Science and Sustainability)

Lawrence Susskind, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA
(Public and Environmental Dispute Resolution)

Finn Tarp, University of Copenhagen, UNU-World Institute for Development Economics Research (WIDER), Denmark
(Development Economics)

Vinod Tewari, The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) University, India
(Urban Management and Governance)

Barton Buzz Thompson, Stanford University, USA
(Environmental and Natural Resources Law)

Kerry Turner, University of East Anglia, United Kingdom
(Environmental Economics and Management)

Masataka Watanabe, Keio University, Japan
(Ecosystems Modeling, Watershed Management)

Arnim Wiek, Arizona State University, USA
(Sustainability, Sustainable Development)

Masaru Yarime, The University of Tokyo, Japan
(Sustainability and Innovation)

Zakri A. Hamid, Universiti Sains Malasia, Malaysia
(Ecosystem Assessment)

Fusuo Zhang, China Agricultural University, China
(Plant Nutrition)

Editorial Office

Darek Gondor, The University of Tokyo, UNU-Institute for Sustainability and Peace (ISP), Japan
(Environmental Policy and Management)



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