期刊名称:CANADIAN STUDIES IN POPULATION
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Canadian Studies in Population is the scholarly journal of the Canadian Population Society. Canadian Studies in Population is indexed in Web of Science, Current Contents/Social and Behavioral Sciences, Social Sciences Citation Index, and Sociological Abstracts. Articles from Volume 1, Number 1, 1974 to the current issue are available at DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals.
Canadian Studies in Population has a broad interest in substantive and technical demography and related fields of study. While Canadian Studies in Population will continue to emphasize Canadian content, the editorial board encourages manuscript submissions from all sectors of the international community.
It is assumed that manuscripts submitted for review to Canadian Studies in Population have not been previously published and are not scheduled for publication elsewhere. Submission of a manuscript to other professional journals while that manuscript is under review by Canadian Studies in Population is unacceptable.
Instructions to Authors
Authors are asked to prepare their papers in accordance with the following guidelines.
1. Mail one electronic copy of manuscript (prepared in Microsoft Word document format) to the Editor of Canadian Studies in Population at the following address: cspeditr@ualberta.ca
2. Manuscripts should not exceed 30 pages (including references), and should be double-spaced with wide margins. Use Times New Roman 12-point font.
3. The cover page is to include the title of the article and the author's name, e-mail address (sufficient for lead author only), and institutional affiliation. The author's name should not appear anywhere else in the body of the paper.
4. Author/s should provide English and French abstracts of the paper, each not exceeding 100 words. The abstract should be a concise summary of the paper and its conclusions, not a copy of the introductory paragraph. List three or four Keywords on a separate line after the abstract.
5. Sub-topics or headings should be limited to two levels and referred to in the text by title rather than by number.
6. Use Footnotes for substantive comments or clarifications to the text. Submitted endnotes will be reset as footnotes.
7. Style of citations
In the text, use in-line author-date citations (last name of author and year of publication, with page numbers if appropriate). It is preferable to place them at the end of sentences, but in any case they should not interrupt modifier phrases (e.g., ‘This contradicts Bell’s (1964) analysis...’ is not correct). For citation of works by more than two authors, use the first author's name and ‘et al.’ (but provide all names in the reference list). Do not use ‘ibid.’
Do not use a comma after the author’s name. If a page number is to be given in connection with an author’s work, use a colon after the year of publication followed by the page number or appropriate range of pages (using an en dash* and truncating leading common digits). Separate citations by different authors with a semicolon, listing them in forward chronological order with respect to year of publication (oldest to newest). Follow the examples below:
- It has been shown that the propensity to migrate is strongest among young adults (Lee 1966).
- Various theories have been suggested in the literature linking fertility change to economic change (Brown 1966; White 1978, 1984; Black 1982; Green 2003: 21–56).
- Some researchers have argued that there is a positive association between age and belief in life after death (James 1951; Bones 1990: 430–3).
- According to the findings of Barnold (1980: 12) and Beim and Charlie (2001), smoking is inversely associated with education.
- Quotations in the text. If a quotation is longer than three lines, start a new paragraph and use quotation marks to enclose the quoted material (they will be removed in typeset text). The end of the quote must include an author-date citation as indicated below:
“Even a casual examination of the data suggests that fertility may be countercyclical in Canada. When the unemployment rate was at its minimum in 1965 and 1966 (at roughly 3.6 per cent), the decline in the total fertility rate (as measured by the annual change) was at its maximum over the entire period from 1948–1984. Similarly, in the early 1980s when the unemployment rate had increased to over 11 per cent, the decline in the total fertility rate had slowed substantially and even increased slightly in 1984” (Hyatt and Milne 1991: 3, 5).
8. Reference list
Include a double-spaced alphabetical list of references cited in the text, giving full publication information and without any abbreviations (except state codes and publishers as given). Do not use quotation marks around the titles of any works. Follow the examples below as to form, structure, and capitalization. For multiple works by the same author(s), indicate all others after the first occurrence with 3 em dashes* before the period instead of the author name(s).
Books
Beaujot, R. and D. Kerr. 2004. Population Change in Canada. Don Mills, ON: Oxford University Press.
Becker, G. 1976. A Treatise on the Family. Harvard: Harvard University Press.
———. 1981. The Economic Approach to Human Behavior. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Edited books
Simon, J.L. (ed.). 1995. The State of Humanity. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell.
Articles
Henry L. 1968. The verification of data in historical demography. Population Studies 22:61–81.
Wood, C.H. and F.D. Bean. 1977. Offspring gender and family size: Implications from a comparison of Mexican Americans and Anglo Americans. Journal of Marriage and the Family 39(1):129–39.
Chapter in a book
Fong, E. 2005. Immigration and the city, in Urban Canada: Sociological Perspectives, edited by H.H. Hiller. Don Mills, ON: Oxford University Press, pp. 37–68.
Freedman, D., A. Thornton, D. Camburn, D. Alwin, and L. Young-DeMarco. 1988. The life history calendar: A technique for collecting retrospective data, in Sociological Methodology, edited by C.C. Clogg. Vol. 18. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, pp. 87–101.
Paper presented at a conference
van de Walle, E. and S. Lardoux. 2005. ‘Living with a man’: Cohabitation in sub-Saharan Africa. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Population Association of America. Philadelphia, USA (March 31–April 2).
Government report
Frenette, M. and R. Morissette. 2003. Will they ever converge? Earnings of immigrants and Canadian-born workers over the past two decades. Analytical Studies Branch Research Paper Series (Cat. No. 11F0019MIE2003-215). Ottawa: Statistics Canada.
Article retrieved from the Web
Kremarik, F. 2000. A family affair: Children’s participation in sports. Canadian Social Trends 58:20–4. http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/11-008-XIE/2000002/articles/5166.pdf (retrieved April 9, 2008).
Paper not yet assigned to a specific issue of a journal but with known Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
Klen, J.C., M.B. Powel, J.H. Man, G.H. Land, and W.F. Shore. The effects of climate change on ecosystems. Eco Journal. DOI: 10.1017/S0021932003001615.
9. Tables
Each table should by on a separate page and numbered consecutively in Arabic numerals (e.g., Table 3). Tables should be constructed in MS Word using the ‘Tables’ facility (ensure there is a new row of cells for each line of data, and do not separate data within columns with paragraph returns). Tables should be either in black and white or in colour, and should not be locked. In the manuscript, tables should be placed at the end of the submitted manuscript in a separate section, with placeholders indicating where they should appear within the text, e.g., insert Table X here.
It is very important that each table should not exceed in size the equivalent of one journal page (6 in. by 9 in, with 3/4-in. margins). Avoid gridlines in the body of the table.
10. Graphs, maps, and other figures
Graphs, maps, and other figures should be provided on separate pages in the manuscript and numbered consecutively, apart from the tables.
Graphs should be constructed in Excel format. Other figures can be sent as high-quality tiff or jpeg files. Figures and graphs should not be enclosed by boxes. For graphs, do not use gridlines and do not shade the background. The fonts for legends and labels should be sansserif (such as Arial), and the font size chosen such that it would be approximately 9-point when reduced to the size printed in the journal.
Place maps, graphs, and any other types of figures at the end of the manuscript document and indicate where each is to be inserted in the text, e.g. insert Figure X here. These can be either in black and white or in colour, and should not be locked.
11. Electronic files
Electronic files (e.g., Excel) of all tables, figures, and graphs will be requested by the editorial office at the time a manuscript is accepted for copyediting and formatting.
12. Acknowledgments (optional)
Place acknowledgement in a separate section at the end of the main part of the text, before the References.
* In Microsoft Word, the en dash (indicating ‘to’ within ranges) is generated by keying +; the em dash is generated by keying ++. Or use the Insert–Symbol menu command.
Preparation of Book Reviews
Book reviews should be in the range of 500 to 1,500 words.
Reviewers should include on the first page the title of the book, its author, the city of publication, the publisher, ISBN number(s), price of book, and number of pages. Structure this information on the first page of the review, as indicated below. Use Times New Roman 12-point font. Include reviewer’s name, affiliation, and e-mail address.
Editorial Board Editorial Office Editor Frank Trovato Population Research Laboratory University of Alberta Assistants to the Editor Donna Fong Population Research Laboratory University of Alberta Abu Sadat Nurullah Department of Sociology University of Alberta Associate Editors Gunnar Andersson, Stockholm University, Sweden Rod Beaujot, University of Western Ontario, Canada Alain P. Bélanger, INRS, Urbanisation, Culture et Société, Canada Thomas K. Burch, University of Victoria, Canada Monica Boyd, University of Toronto, Canada Giuseppe De Bartolo, University of Cosenza, Italy Edward G. Ebanks, University of Western Ontario, Canada Barry Edmonston, University of Victoria, Canada Alain Gagnon, University of Montreal, Canada Danielle Gauvreau, University of Montreal, Canada M.V. George, Emory University, USA Jacques Henripin, University of Montreal, Canada Graeme Hugo, University of Adelaide, Australia Madeline Kalbach, University of Calgary, Canada Cathie Krull, Queen's University, Canada Evelyne Lapierre-Adamcyck, University of Montreal, Canada Wolfgang Lutz, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Austria Susan McDaniel, University of Lethbridge, Canada Margaret Michalowski, Statistics Canada, Canada Melinda Mills, University of Groningen, Holland Karel Neels, Antwerp University, Belgium Ian Pool, University of Waikato, New Zealand Amélie Quesnell-Vallée, McGill University, Canada K.V. Rao, India Network Foundation, USA Zenaida R. Ravanera, University of Western Ontario, Canada Anatole Romaniuc, University of Alberta, Canada Byron G. Spencer, McMaster University, Canada Leroy Stone, Statistics Canada, Canada Chirayath Suchindran, University of North Carolina, USA Lorne Tepperman, University of Toronto, Canada Rosemary A. Venne, University of Saskatchewan, Canada Andrew Wister, Simon Fraser University, Canada Zheng Wu, University of Victoria, Canada General Information Correspondence concerning manuscripts, subscriptions, change of address, permission to reprint articles, and other business matters should be addressed to: Canadian Studies in Population Editorial Office Population Research Laboratory Department of Sociology University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta Canada T6G 2H4 Tel: 780-492-5941 Fax: 780-492-7196 Email: cspeditr@ualberta.ca Manuscripts may be submitted electronically to cspeditr@ualberta.ca
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