期刊名称:ETHNICITIES
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal Aims and Scope:
There is currently a burgeoning interest in both sociology and politics around questions of ethnicity, nationalism and related issues such as identity politics and minority rights. Ethnicities is a cross-disciplinary journal that will provide a critical dialogue between these debates in sociology and politics, and related disciplines.
Ethnicities has three broad aims, each of which adds a new and distinctive dimension to the academic analysis of ethnicity, nationalism, identity politics and minority rights.
A Journal of Sociology and Politics
Ethnicities aims to achieve a critical nexus between the disciplines of sociology and politics with respect to debates on ethnicity, nationalism and identity politics. These debates have until recently been largely constrained within disciplinary boundaries, resulting in the two disciplines 'talking past each other' with respect to such issues.
Consideration of the interconnections between ethnicity and other forms of identity also lends itself to an even wider interdisciplinarity. As such, the journal aims to encourage work from a wide range of related disciplines, including anthropology, black studies, cultural studies, education, gender studies, geography, history, law, literary and media studies, philosophy and social policy.
A Journal of Culture and Structure
Ethnicities aims to explore the complex interconnections between culture and socioeconomic structure with respect to the mobilisation of ethnicity, other social movements, and the implications of such mobilisation(s) for modern nation-states. In this sense, it aims specifically to bring together the more 'traditional' materialist emphases and concerns of 'race' and ethnicity studies, with the wider theoretical debates (both sociological and political) on the (re)construction of democratic societies. In so doing, it will also explore the interface between modernist and postmodernist debates on such issues.
An International Journal
Ethnicities has a truly international reach, as reflected in the composition and research expertise of the Editorial and International Advisory Boards. The journal welcomes discussion of any country or region of the world, as well as transnational and diasporic contexts. Contributors are encouraged to set their work, wherever possible, within a transnational and/or transregional perspective.
Topics Covered Include
?minorities and the nation-state ?multiculturalism ?culture, class and representation ?gender and ethnicity ?citizenship, universalism and difference ?minority rights and political representation ?hybrid and multiple identities ?racism and antiracism ?ethnicity and socioeconomic equality ?diasporic movements ?transnational networks ?indigenous movements ?language and ethnicity ?education and cultural pluralism ?colonialism and postcolonialism ?whiteness ?religious mobilisation and conflict ?regulation of ethnic conflict ?ethnonationalisms ?ethnicity, nationalism and globalisation
Instructions to Authors Manuscript Submission Guidelines:
Aims and Scopes
Now in its third year as an ISI rated journal Ethnicities is a fully peer reviewed journal with an impressive international reputation and focus. As a genuinely cross-disciplinary journal centred on sociology and politics Ethnicities provides the very best critical, interdisciplinary dialogue on questions of ethnicity, nationalism and related issues such as identity politics and minority rights.
Submission of mss
Authors should retain one copy of their manuscript and send two identical copies, each fully numbered and typed in double spacing throughout, on one side only of white A4 or US standard size paper, and a disk version saved in MS Word or RTF to: The Editors, Ethnicities, Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship, Sociology Department, University of Bristol, 12 Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1UQ, UK. Fax: +44 117 954 6609 Email: ethnicities-journal@bristol.ac.uk
Covering letter
Please attach to every submission a letter confirming that all authors have agreed to the submission and that the article is not currently being considered for publication by any other journal.
Format of mss
Each manuscript should contain:
?title page with full title and subtitle (if any). For the purposes of blind refereeing, full name of each author with current affiliation and full address/phone/fax/email details plus short biographical note should be supplied on a separate sheet.
?abstract of 100-150 words and 5-10 key words
?main text and word count -- suggested target is about 7000 to 8000 words. Text to be clearly organized, with a clear hierarchy of headings and subheadings and quotations exceeding 40 words displayed, indented, in the text.
?end notes (if necessary) rather than footnotes, which should be signalled in the text by superscript numbers and supplied as a list at the end of the ms
?references should be cited in the text by author and date (Parekh, 2000) with a full alphabetical listing (examples below) at the end of the article:
Books and articles in books
Parekh, B. (2000) Rethinking Multiculturalism: Cultural Diversity and Political Theory. London: Macmillan.
Hamelink, C. (2000) 'Human Rights: The Next Fifty Years', in R. Phillipson (ed.) Rights to Language: Equity, Power and Education, pp. 62-6. Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
Journals
Levine, H. (1999) 'Reconstructing Ethnicity', Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 5(2): 165-80.
Papers
Costa, J. and Wynants, S. (1999) 'Catalan Linguistic Policy Act: External Protection or Internal Restriction?', paper presented to the Nationalism, Identity and Minority Rights Conference, University of Bristol, September.
Websites
Indigenous Delegates Consensus Statement (1994) Fourth World Documentation Project [http://www.cwis.org/fwdp.html], file IPPM_4.TXT
Tables
Tables should be typed (double line-spaced) on separate sheets and their position indicated by a marginal note in the text. All tables should have short descriptive captions with footnotes and their source(s) typed below the tables.
Illustrations
All line diagrams and photographs are termed 'Figures' and should be referred to as such in the manuscript. They should be numbered consecutively. Line diagrams should be presented in a form suitable for immediate reproduction (i.e. not requiring redrawing), each on a separate A4 sheet. They should be reproducible to a final printed text area of 115 mm x 185 mm. Photographs should preferably be submitted as clear, glossy, unmounted black and white prints with a good range of contrast. Slides are also acceptable. All figures should have short descriptive captions typed on a separate sheet.
Authors are responsible for obtaining permissions from copyright holders for reproducing any illustrations, tables, figures or lengthy quotations previously published elsewhere.
Style
Articles must be written in English. Use a clear readable style, avoiding jargon. If technical terms or acronyms must be included, define them when first used. Use non-racist, non-sexist language and plurals rather than he/she.
Spellings
UK or US spellings may be used with '-ize' spellings as given in the Oxford English Dictionary (e.g. organize, recognize).
Punctuation
Use single quotation marks with double quotes inside single quotes. Dates should be presented in the form 1 May 1998. Do not use points in abbreviations, contractions or acronyms (e.g. AD, USA, Dr, PhD)
Disks
On acceptance of your manuscript for publication, you will be asked to supply a diskette (preferably IBM compatible) of the final version.
Copyright
Before publication authors are requested to assign copyright to SAGE, subject to retaining their right to reuse the material in other publications written or edited by themselves and due to be published preferably at least one year after initial publication in the Journal.
Proofs and offprints
Authors will receive proofs of their articles and be asked to send corrections to The Editors, Ethnicities, Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship, Sociology Department, University of Bristol, 12 Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1UQ, UK [email: ethnicities-journal@bristol.ac.uk] Authors will receive electronic offprints of their article and a complimentary journal copy. A maximum of 5 journal copies will be supplied for multi-authored articles. These will be supplied to the main author
Books for review and manuscripts of reviews should be sent to the Editorial Assistant, Ethnicities, Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship, Sociology Department, University of Bristol, 12 Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1UQ, UK.
Email: ethnicities-journal@bristol.ac.uk
Website: http://www.bristol.ac.uk/Depts/Sociology
English Language Editing Services: Please click here for information on professional English language editing services recommended by SAGE.
Editorial Board Editorial Board:
| Corresponding US Editors |
| Craig Calhoun |
Social Science Research Council, New York, USA |
| Troy Duster |
University of California, Berkeley and New York University, USA |
| Rodolfo D. Torres |
University of California, Irvine, USA |
| |
| Editorial Board |
| Thomas Hylland Eriksen |
University of Oslo, Norway |
| Stuart Hall |
The Open University, UK |
| Patricia Hill Collins |
University of Cincinnati, USA |
| Will Kymlicka |
Queen's University, Kingston, Canada |
| |
| EDITORIAL BOARD |
| Thomas Hylland Eriksen |
University of Oslo, Norway |
| Stuart Hall |
The Open University, UK |
| Patricia Hill Collins |
University of Cincinnati, USA |
| Will Kymlicka |
Queen's University, Kingston, Canada |
| |
| International Advisory Board |
| Ien Ang |
University of Western Sydney, Nepean, Australia |
| Alastair Bonnett |
University of Newcastle |
| Rogers Brubaker |
University of California, Los Angeles, USA |
| Stephen Castles |
University of Oxford, UK |
| Frank Dikötter |
School of Oriental and African Studies, London, UK |
| Cynthia Enloe |
Clark University, Worcester, USA |
| Adrian Favell |
University of California, Los Angeles, USA |
| Amy Gutmann |
University of Pennsylvania, USA |
| R Enrique Hamel |
Autonoma Metropolitana, Mexico City, Mexico |
| Miroslav Hroch |
Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic |
| Joel S Kahn |
La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia |
| Riva Kastoryano |
CRNS, Paris, France |
| Mahmood Mamdani |
Columbia University, New York, USA |
| Douglas S. Massey |
Princeton University |
| Peter McLaren |
University of California, Los Angeles, USA |
| Joane Nagel |
University of Kansas, Lawrence, USA |
| T K Oommen |
Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India |
| Bhikhu Parekh |
University of Westminster, London, UK |
| Jan Nederveen Pieterse |
University of Illinois, Urbana, USA |
| Ralph Premdas |
University of the West Indies at Trinidad |
| Brett St Louis |
Goldsmiths College of London, UK |
| Linda Smith |
University of Auckland, New Zealand |
| Nigel Thrift |
Warwick University, UK |
| Anna Triandafyllidou |
European University Institute, Florence, Italy |
| James Tully |
University of Victoria, Canada |
| Bryan S Turner |
National University of Singapore, Singapore |
| Mohammad Waseem |
Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad, Pakistan |
| Mary Waters |
Harvard University, Cambridge, USA |
| William Julius Wilson |
Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations and Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University |
| Nira Yuval-Davis |
University of East London, UK |
| Min Zhou |
University of California, Los Angeles, USA |
| |
| Executive Board |
| Rohit Barot |
University of Bristol, UK |
| Harriet Bradley |
University of Bristol, UK |
| Steve Fenton |
University of Bristol, UK |
| Will Guy |
University of Bristol, UK |
| Vernon Hewitt |
University of Bristol, UK |
| Stephen May |
University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand |
| Tariq Modood |
University of Bristol, UK |
| Judith Squires |
University of Bristol, UK |
| Leon Tikly |
University of Bristol, UK |
| |
| Editorial Assistant |
| Simon Weaver |
University of Bristol, UK |
|