期刊名称:CITY & COMMUNITY
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
City & Community (C&C)i s dedicated to publishing research and theory that explore the social aspects of the metropolis. How do people get attached to places? How do inequalities and differences shape a city and how does the city influence differences and inequalities? How does an Internet community compare to a traditional community? Aimed at exploring the meaning and significance of the metropolis, C&C includes works on immigration, rural communities, social networks, suburbia, urban movements, urban history, and virtual communities among others. All unsolicited manuscripts submitted to City & Community are evaluated through a double-blind peer review process.
City & Community, a joint creation of the American Sociological Association and its section on Community and Urban Sociology, is the first ASA section journal, a landmark event for the Association.
Indexed / Abstracted in
Abstracts in Anthropology Abstracts in Social Gerontology (Sage) Academic Search (EBSCO) Academic Search Premier (EBSCO) Criminal Justice Abstracts (Sage) CSA Biological Sciences Database (CSA/CIG) CSA Environmental Sciences & Pollution Management Database (CSA/CIG) CSA Sustainability Science Abstracts (CSA/CIG) Current Abstracts (EBSCO) Current Contents?Social & Behavioral Sciences (Thomson ISI) EBSCO Online (EBSCO) Ecology Abstracts (Elsevier) Journal Citation Reports/Social Science Edition (Thomson ISI) Proquest 5000 (ProQuest) Proquest Research Library (ProQuest) PsycINFO Social Sciences Citation Index?(Thomson ISI) Social SciSearch?(Thomson ISI) SocINDEX (EBSCO) Sociological Abstracts (CSA/CIG) Urban Studies Abstracts (Sage)
Instructions to Authors
City & Community encourages submissions on all matters pertinent to cities and communities, in general. We are particularly interested in questions about the nature of cities, how social inequalities, global integration, culture and history, bear on the construction of places, and similar issues.
Manuscript Submission Since essays are reviewed anonymously, your name and affiliation should appear only on a separate cover sheet. Package your manuscript securely. Include the following:
?Cover letter giving address of corresponding author, title of manuscript, and any important information.
?A copy of your manuscript, including title page, abstract, text, references, footnotes, tables, and figures/illustrations with captions. Copies must be clear reproductions.
?Your e-mail address so that we can promptly inform you of the receipt of your manuscript package.
?An electronic copy of your manuscript, preferably in Microsoft Word format. The electronic copy may be sent on disk or CD with the hardcopy, or may be sent as an email attachment to citycom@brown.edu.
Mail to:
Hilary Silver, Editor; City & Community
Box 1916
Brown University
Providence, RI 02912
USA
If you have any questions whatsoever about the manuscript submission process, including the suitability of your manuscript for publication in City & Community, please write directly to this e-mail address: citycom@brown.edu.
Manuscript Preparation
All copy must be typed (12-point type size preferred), double-spaced (including footnotes and references) on 81/2 by 11 inch white opaque paper. Line length must not exceed six (6) inches. Margins must be a minimum of 11/4 inches on all four sides.Submitted papers should be no longer than 40 pages long. This includes: (1) title page, (2) abstract, (3) text, (4) references, (5) endnotes, (6) tables, and (7) figures. If you have any concerns about your manuscript's length, feel free to write the Editor at the e-mail address above. To ensure anonymity during the review process, authors must remove all indications of their identity from the manuscript.
Detailed instructions for manuscript preparation are as follows:
1. The title page should include the full title, the author's name (listed vertically if more than one), the institutional affiliation of each author, and a "running head." Use an asterisk (*) to add a footnote to the title giving the full address of the author to whom communications about the article should be sent. In the same footnote. Cite acknowledgment, credits, or grant numbers.
2. Type the abstract (fewer than 150 words) on a separate page headed by the title. Omit author information.
3. The text of your manuscript should begin on a new page headed by the title. No author identification. References, footnotes, tables, and figures each appear in separate sections following the text.
a. Headings and subheadings in the text indicate the organization of the content.
b. References in the text cite the last name of the author and year of publication. Include page references whenever you think it would help the reader. Identify subsequent citations of the same source in the same way as the first. Examples follow:
- If author's name is in the text, follow it with year in parentheses [". . . Duncan (1959)."].
- If author's name is not in the text, enclose the last name and year in parentheses [". . .(Gouldner, 1963)."].
- Pagination follows year of publication after a comma [". . .(Kuhn (1970, p. 71)."].
- Give both last names for joint authors [". . .(Martin and Bailey, 1988)."].
- Give all last names for up to three authors each time citation appears. For four or more authors, use et al. in the citation [". . .(Carr, Smith, and Jones, 1962), and for a reference to Carr, Smith, Jones, and Henry, use (Carr et al., 1969).
- For institutional authorship, supply minimum identification from the beginning of the complete citation [". . .U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1963, p. 117). . ."].
- Separate a series of references with semicolon [". . .(Burgess, 1968; Parson et al., 1971). . ."].
- For unpublished materials, use "forthcoming" to indicate material scheduled for publication. Otherwise, use "unpublished," e.g. ["Smith (forthcoming) and Jones (unpublished). . ."].
c. Footnotes in the text should be numbered consecutively throughout the article with superscript Arabic numerals. If a footnote is referred to again later in the text, use a parenthetical note "(see note 3)."
4. References follow the text in a section headed "References." All references used in the text must be listed in the references section, and vice versa. Publication information for each must be complete and correct. Type the references alphabetically by author(s), use first and last names for all authors. If there are two or more items by the same author(s), list them in the order of year of publication. If the cited material is unpublished but has been accepted for publication, use "Forthcoming" in place of the date, and give the name of the journal or publisher. Otherwise, use "Unpublished" in place of the date.
If two or more works are by the same author(s) within the same year, distinguish them (in the order published) by adding the letters a, b, etc., to the year (or to "Forthcoming" or "Unpublished"), and list them in a, b,. . ., order.
For multiple authorship, only the name of the first author is inverted (e.g., "Jones, Arthur B., Colin D. Smith, and James Petersen."). List all authors; using "et al." in the reference section is not acceptable.
A few examples follow:
- Books: Habermas, J. 1990. Moral Consciousness and Communicative Action, C. Lenhardt and S.W. Nicholsen (trans.). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
U.S. Bureau of the Census. 1960. Characteristics of Population, vol. 1. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. Weber, M. [1896] 1976. The Agrarian Sociology of Ancient Civilizations, R. I. Frank (trans.). London: NLB.
- Periodicals: Merton, R. K. 1985. "The Historicist/Presentist Dilemma: A Composite Imputation and a Foreknowing Response," History of Sociology 6(1), 137-151.
Nelson, B. 1974. "MaxWeber's 'Author's Introduction' (1920): A Master Clue to His Main Aims," Sociological Inquiry 44(4), 269-278.
- Collections: Bachelard, G. 1991. "The Abdications of Empiricism," in P. Bourdieu, J.-C. Chamboredon and J.-C. Passerron (eds.), The Craft of Sociology, R. Nice (trans.), pp. 157-159. New York: Walter de Gruyter.
Momigliano, A. 1980. "Max Weber and Edward Meyer," in A. Momigliano, Sesto comtributo alla storia delgi studi classici e del mondo antico, vol. 1. Rome: Edizioni di Storia e Litteratura.
5. Type the footnotes in numerical order as a separate section (headed "Footnotes") following the references. Begin each with the superscript Arabic numeral to which it is keyed in the text e.g., "1This is footnote one." Because long footnotes distract the reader and are expensive to print, use them only when they are absolutely necessary. Rather than including detailed or complex material in a footnote, consider (i) inserting a short footnote indicating that the material is available from the author, or (ii) adding an appendix. If you use an appendix, the reference in the text should read, "(see Appendix A for complete derivation)."
Footnotes can (a) explain or amplify text, (b) cite materials of limited availability, or (c) append information
presented in a table.
6. Number tables consecutively throughout the text and type each on a separate sheet at the end. Insert a note in the text to indicate the placement, e.g., "Table 2 about here." Each table must include a descriptive title and headings for columns and rows (no abbreviations). Gather general footnotes to tables as "Note:" or "Notes:". Use a, b, c, etc., for footnotes. Asterisks * and/or ** indicate significance at the 5 percent and 1 percent levels, respectively. Do not photo-reduce tables.
7. Number figures and/or illustrations consecutively throughout. Each should be accompanied by a caption. Insert a note in the text to indicate placement. e.g., "Fig. 1 about here." Figures/illustrations submitted with the final draft must be "camera-ready," executed in black ink on white paper or vellum, with clear, medium weight lines. All lettering should be done by an artist in pen and ink, or by applying press-type or typeset text to the art work. Figures/illustrations should be legible when reduced or enlarged to 51/16 inch (full page width).
STATEMENT OF ASA POLICY ON MULTIPLE SUBMISSION
Submission of manuscripts to a professional journal clearly implies commitment to publish in that journal.
The competition of journal space requires a great deal of time and effort on the part of editorial readers whose main compensation for this service is the opportunity to read papers prior to publication and the gratification associated with discharge of professional obligations. For these reasons the ASA regards submission of a manuscript to a professional journal while that paper is under review by another journal as unacceptable.
Section II. B4. ASA Code of Ethics
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Editorial Board
Editor Hilary Silver, Brown University, USA
Managing Editor
Sukriti Issar, Brown University, USA
Associate Editors Elijah Anderson, University of Pennsylvania, USA Nancy Denton, State University of New York - Albany, USA Mary Pattillo, Northwestern University, USA Sharon Zukin, Brooklyn College and SUNY Graduate Center, USA
Book Review Editors Leonard Nevarez, Vassar College, USA Hilary Silver, Brown University, USA
Editorial Board Robert Adelman, University of Buffalo (SUNY) Xavier de Souza Briggs, Harvard University, USA Xiangming Chen, University of Illinois - Chicago, USA Wendy Griswold, Northwestern University, USA Keith Hoggart, King's College, London, UK Ray Hutchison, University of Wisconsin - Green Bay, USA Richard Lloyd, Vanderbilt University Lyn Lofland, University of California - Davis, USA John R. Logan, State University of New York - Albany, USA William Michelson, University of Toronto, Canada Melinda Milligan, Tulane University, USA Charles Tilly, Columbia University, USA Roger Waldinger, University of California - Los Angeles, USA
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