期刊名称:CHINA JOURNAL
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
The China Journal is a refereed, scholarly publication that focuses on topics relating to China, Hong Kong and Taiwan since 1949, plus studies of the major issues that contribute to understanding of Communist Party history and contemporary events.
For more than two decades the Journal has provided informed and insightful commentary from China scholars world-wide. It enjoys a substantial international readership and, as shown by their comments, is regarded by many academics as well as persons involved in business and government as the most interesting journal in the field.
In addition to a wide range of articles, the Journal also carries book reviews of all the important books published on modern China.
Instructions to Authors
Submission of ManuscriptsThe China Journal welcomes contributions from all points of view and from all fields. Articles should be comprehensible to a broad readership within the field of modern China studies.
Submission of an article is taken to mean that it has not been previously published and is not being considered for publication elsewhere.
Contributors should refer to the style sheet.
Please send contributions to:
The Editors The China Journal Contemporary China Centre Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies Australian National University Canberra ACT 0200 Australia Further information is available from the editors:
Dr Andrew Kipnis (andrew.kipnis@anu.edu.au) or Dr Luigi Tomba (luigi.tomba@anu.edu.au)
Style SheetPapers should not be longer than 11,000 words.
Contributors are asked to submit their paper by email as an attachment, preferably as a Word document. Ensure that all reference to the author's name is deleted, to ensure anonymity during the refereeing process. Tables or charts should not be in colour (as the journal is printed in black and white), should be able to be displayed and read in Word, and should be provided at a size that fits within the document margins.
If it is not possible to send a copy of the article electronically in the first instance, then contributors may send three printed copies, single-sided and double-spaced, and with reference to the author's name deleted. However, if the article is accepted for publication, an electronic copy meeting the above requirements (except for anonymity!) will then be requested.
Papers contributed are sent to at least two readers for evaluation. The identity of both author and readers is kept strictly confidential.
Those papers which are accepted for publication are edited in line with the journal's editorial conventions. The following guidelines are included to assist both author and editors:
FOOTNOTES are at the foot of the page. Generally, bibliographies should not be listed separately from the text but should be incorporated instead as footnotes. Footnote references are in the form:
1 Gu Hua, A Small Town Called Hibiscus (Beijing: Panda Press, 1983), pp. 230-4. 2 Victor Nee, "Peasant Household Individualism", in William Parish (ed.), Chinese Rural Development: The Great Transformation (Armonk: M. E. Sharpe, 1985), p. 170.
Journal references are in the form:
3 Gerald Chan, "The Two-Chinas Problem and the Olympic Formula", Pacific Affairs, Vol.18, No.3 (Fall 1985), p. 475.
Please include translations for foreign-language words, phrases, book titles and journal names. Foreign words are italicized except for article titles and publishing companies. For Chinese titles, words are lower case except for the first word of the title and proper names and places.
4 Wu Ming, "Lun Zhongguo geming shi" [On the History of the Chinese Revolution], Renmin ribao [People's Daily, hereafter RMRB], 3 January 1953, p. 1. 5 Wu Wei, Zhongguo xin xieshizhuyi wenxue [New Realism Literature from China] (Beijing: Renmin Chubanshe, 1988), p. 11.
Pinyin is used for transliteration of Chinese except for well-known names and titles such as Sun Yat-sen, Chiang Kai-shek and Kuomintang.
Articles and books should be given shortened titles where the work is cited more than once:
6 Gu Hua, A Small Town, pp. 230-4. 7 Wu Ming, "Lun Zhongguo", p. 1.
SPELLING generally follows Webster's New World Dictionary, e.g. center, humor, traveling, enrollment. Other examples of journal usage are: 18 per cent; realize, analyze; the West; judgement; program; CCP (Chinese Communist Party); Third Plenum; Five-Year Plan .
The editors will reword, if possible, any use of a purely masculine word where it more correctly refers to both male and female.
TABLES: Print should be no less than 11 pt and the table should fit into a 21cm x 14cm print area.
OFFPRINTS 25 free off-prints will be sent to authors. For orders above this, please let the journal know well before the printing date.
Editorial Board
Editorial BoardGeremie Barm¨¦, Pacific and Asian History, Australian National University Joseph Y.S. Cheng, Political Science, City University of Hong Kong Mark Elvin, Pacific and Asian History, Australian National University John Fitzgerald, History, La Trobe University Keith Forster, Asian Studies, Southern Cross University David Goodman, International Studies, University of Technology, Sydney Anne Gunn, Pacific and Asian History, Australian National University Beverley Hooper, East Asian Studies, Sheffield University J. Bruce Jacobs, Asian Languages and Studies, Monash University W.J.F. Jenner, China and Korea Centre, Australian National University Pauline Keating, History, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand David Kelly, Political Science, Australian Defence Forces Academy Andrew Kipnis, Contemporary China Centre, Australian National University Kam Louie, Chinese Studies, University of Queensland Donald McMillen, Asian Studies, University of Southern Queensland Greg Noble, International Relations, Australian National University Kevin O'Brien, Political Science, Ohio State University Scott Rozelle, Economics, University of California, Davis Ian Scott, Political Science, Murdoch University On-Kit Tam, School of Business, Monash University Frederick Teiwes, Government, University of Sydney Isabelle Thireau, Centre d'Etudes sur la Chine Contemporaine, Maison de Scinece de l'homme Stig Thogersen, Asian Studies, University of Aarhus, Denmark Andrew Walder, Sociology, Stanford University Wang Gungwu, East Asian Institute, National University of Singapore Andrew Watson, Ford Foundation, Beijing Ian Wilson, Contemporary China Centre, Australian National University You Ji, Political Science, University of New South Wales Graham Young, Politics, University of New England
|