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期刊名称:CRIMINOLOGY

ISSN:0011-1384
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:WILEY, 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN, USA, NJ, 07030-5774
  出版社网址:http://www.bsos.umd.edu/asc/
期刊网址:http://www.asc41.com/absbyear.html
影响因子: 6.692 (2020年) 3.842(2018年) 3.796(2017年) 5.019(2016年) 4.778(2015年) 3.098(2014年) 3.06(2013年) 3.268 (2012年) 2.467(2011年)
主题范畴:CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY

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



About the journal

 

Criminology:  An Interdisciplinary Journal is an official publication of the American Society of Criminology.  The journal is interdisciplinary in nature, devoted to crime and deviant behavior, as found in sociology, psychology, design, systems analysis, and decision theory as applied to crime and criminal justice.   The major emphasis is on empirical research and scientific methodology, and article reporting on the original research are given priority.  Articles which review the literature or deal with theoretical issues stated in the literature are also dealt with and suggest the types of investigation which might properly be carried out in the future.

Criminology is published four times annually  -- February, May, August, and November.  Submissions to the journal should be send directly to the Editor via the on-line submission process (see link below).  A $10.00 submission fee, made payable to the American Society of Criminology, should also be mailed to the Editor.  Subscriptions are $130.00 per year within the United States and $150.00 per year outside the United States.

 


Instructions to Authors

 

GUIDE FOR PREPARING MANUSCRIPTS FOR CRIMINOLOGY

ELECTRONIC MANUSCRIPT SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS

Please read this document carefully and take steps to ensure that your manuscript is consistent with these guidelines.  Once a paper is accepted for publication, any deviations from these guidelines can cause significant delays in publishing.  Thank you.

EDITORIAL POLICY
The journal is interdisciplinary, devoted to the study of crime, deviant behavior, and related phenomena, as found in the social and behavioral sciences and in the fields of law, criminal justice, and history. The major emphases are theory, research, historical issues, policy evaluation, and current controversies concerning crime, law, and justice.

MANUSCRIPTS
Manuscripts may be submitted online at our secure site,
www.criminology.umd.edu.  Follow the instructions on the web page regarding registration and manuscript submission.  For those who would prefer not to submit online, typewritten, double-spaced manuscripts printed on one side of each page should be submitted in quadruplicate to Ray Paternoster, Editor, Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, University of Maryland, 2220 LeFrak Hall, College Park, MD 20742 (301) 405-4699.

All submissions, whether electronic or regular mail, must be accompanied by a $10 nonrefundable processing fee, payable to the American Society of Criminology (papers written solely by student members of ASC exempted). Papers accepted for publication should comply with the American Psychological Association¡¯s guidelines concerning non-sexist language. An abstract of approximately 100 words and a brief biographical paragraph describing each author¡¯s current affiliation, research interests, and recent publications, must accompany the manuscript. Keywords may be included directly after the abstract.  The American Society of Criminology regards submission of a manuscript to this journal as a commitment to publish herein; simultaneous submission to another journal is unacceptable. Every effort will be made to notify authors of editorial decisions within three months of manuscript receipt.

In preparing the final draft of your manuscript, please note the following:

1. HEADINGS AND SUBHEADINGS:

Our style provides for four levels of headings. Leave extra space in the double-spaced draft before all levels of headings. The four heading levels are:

MAJOR HEADING LEVEL ¡°A¡±
MAJOR HEADING LEVEL ¡°B¡±
Subheading Level ¡°C¡±
Subheading Level ¡°D¡± (text follows a period on the same line)

¡°A¡± is centered, all capital letters, and boldface. ¡°B¡± is flush left  and all capital letters. ¡°C¡± is flush left on a separate line, capital letters for all important words. ¡°D¡± Begins at paragraph indentation, capital letters for all important words, and is in italics.

2. TABLES AND FIGURES

Please note that if a paper is accepted for publication, all the formatting and layout of tables and graphs will have to be redone in the composition stage of publication.  It is therefore requested that table formatting and layout be kept simple and straightforward.  Information should be conveyed as simply as possible.

In a draft manuscript, which will undoubtedly undergo revision, please place all tables, even small ones, on separate pages at the end of each. Tables should be numbered consecutively throughout the article. Insert a location note at the appropriate place in the text, e.g. ¡°Table 2 about here¡±.

The title of the table is flush left at the top of the page. ¡°Table¡± is followed by a space, the table number, and a period. This is followed by two spaces and then the title of the table, with initial capital letters for all important words, and no period.

Tables should have no borders or shading.  This will be added during composition.  Set the first column heading and column flush left; other headings and columns can be arranged in whatever format best presents the data, so long as all data within a column are aligned with the heading and with other data in the column.

Consult a recent issue of Criminology for style and placement of general notes to the table, specific footnotes, and the source.

Put every figure, even small ones, on a separate page at the end of the paper. Be sure the text refers to all figures, including photographs, line drawings, and graphs and insert a location note at the appropriate place in the text. ¡°Figure¡± followed by a space and the figure number is centered at the top of the page. The title of the figure also is centered on the next line with initial capital letters for all important words.

Figures submitted with the final draft must be of professional quality and ready for reproduction.  If figures originate in a program other than MS Word or WordPerfect, please supply the native format files, for example, PowerPoint or Excel.

Equations must be typed in symbol font. Expressions should be aligned and compound subscripts and superscripts clearly marked if there is any potential for confusion.  Clarify all symbols with notes in the margin of the manuscript.

3. CITATIONS AND REFERENCES

We use an author-date citation style, with complete bibliographic entries appearing in a reference list at the end of the paper. In text, all source references (including subsequent citations of the same source) are to be identified at the appropriate point in the text by the last name of the author, year of publication, and (where needed) pagination. Examples:

If the author¡¯s name is in the text, follow it with the year in parentheses.
Thrasher (1927)

If the author¡¯s name is not in the text, insert, in parentheses, the last name and  year  (Gibbs, 1981)
Pagination follows year of publication after a colon:
(Kornhauser, 1978:73)

Give both last names for dual authors. When there are three or more authors, use  the first author¡¯s name and et al. (Johnson et
al., 1985:3-4)

If there are two works of multiple authors and of the same date that abbreviate to
(for example) Smith, et al., 2001, give the first two names, followed by et al.  (Smith, Watkins et al., 2001; Smith, Murphy et al., 2001). If the first two names  are the same, provide the first name and a short title of the work being cited  (Smith et al., Social Development, 2001)

Separate a series of references with semicolons and enclose them in alphabetic  order   within a single pair of parentheses: (Miller, 1958; Sellin, 1938; Sutherland and Cressey, 1955; Sutherland, 1956)

For unpublished materials, use ¡°in press¡± for material that is scheduled for  publication; use ¡°unpublished¡± otherwise.

The reference appendix, headed by the word ¡°REFERENCES¡±, follows the last page of text. Facts of publication for each item must be complete. For multiple authorship, only the name of the first author is inverted. List the first and last names of all authors--do not use ¡°et al.¡± in the appendix.

List all items alphabetically by author(s). If there are two or more items by the same author(s), list them in order of the year of publication. If there are two or more items by the same author(s) within the same year, distinguish them by adding (in order of first text mention) the letters a, b,  ... order. The date goes below the author(s) name and indented three spaces.

Please note that italics and quotation marks are generally not employed in the references.

Type the references double-spaced. A few examples follow, but consult recent issues of Criminology for further examples.

BOOKS:

Fox, James A.

   1978      Forecasting Crime Data.  Toronto:  Lexington.
 

Rusche, George and Otto Kircheimer

   1939      Punishment and Social Structure.  New York:  Russell and

                 Russell.

U.S. Department of Justice

   1980      Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics--1984. Washington, D. C.: National

                 Criminal Justice Information and Statistics Service.
 
 

JOURNALS:

Messner, Steven F.

   1982a    Poverty, inequality, and the urban homicide rate: Some unexpected findings.

                 Criminology 20:103-114.

   1982b    Societal development, social inequality, and homicide: A cross-national test of

                 a Durkheimian model.  Social Forces 61:225-240.

Miethe, Terance D. and Charles A. Moore

   In Press  Racial differences in criminal processing: The consequences of model

                  selection on conclusions about differential treatment. Sociological Quarterly

                  27.
 

NEWSPAPERS:

Hunt, Matthew
     1999     City sees decline in burglary rates. Norman (Oklahoma) Transcript, 24 June,
                  A15.
Or

Wall Street Journal
1999 National crime statistics misleading.  Editorial, B12.

If the citation is from a newspaper that includes numbered sections, such as a Sunday edition, include the section and page number:  sec. 1A, p. 5.
 

MAGAZINES:

Cannon, Jane
     1985     What about the parents of delinquent children?  Parents¡¯ Weekly, February, 19-21.
 
 

COLLECTIONS:

Kobrin, Solomon

   1971       The formal logical properties of the Shaw-McKay delinquency theory. In

                   Harwin L. Voss and David M. Peterson (eds.), Ecology, Crime and Delinquency.

                   New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts.
 

4. NOTES AND FOOTNOTES

Because the citation-reference style for Criminology eliminates the use of notes or footnotes for bibliographic material, only substantive comments on the text should appear as notes.  In a draft manuscript, place all substantive notes in a numbered list at the end of the paper.

5. FORMAT

All material must be typed double-spaced or triple-spaced (including indented material, notes, tables, and references) on 8 1/2  x 11-inch paper.

Hyphenate only those words that appear in your dictionary as hyphenated words. Do not hyphenate at the ends of lines.

Do not use word processor auto-numbering functions.  These usually cause delays in the composition and publishing phases.

When you send the draft manuscript to us, send the original copy and a very clean copy that has printing on only one side.

Keywords may be included directly under the abstract.

Remember to include any and all acknowledgements you would like to have included in the paper, should it be published.

Include a brief biographical sketch of each author and an abstract of approximately 100 words. Please double-space these items.

New Electronic Submission System for CRIMINOLOGY

The editorial office of CRIMINOLOGY is pleased to announce a new web-based manuscript submission and review system.  The new system facilitates a faster and more cost-effective review process.

Go to www.criminology.umd.edu to register for your username and password.  You can then submit and review papers electronically.  Submission fees must still be sent via regular mail, even for those papers submitted electronically.

The website provides clear instructions for authors to post their manuscript and any supporting documents.  They will receive immediate acknowledgement of receipt of their manuscript and an identification number.  Editorial staff will convert the manuscript to secure PDF format and send it out for review as directed by the editor.  Reviewers will receive an e-mail with the PDF document and the necessary forms for review attached, which they can then upload to the website upon completion.

Everyone is encouraged to visit the website and register. 

 


Editorial Board

 

 Ray Paternoster, Editor                                 Sarah Bacon
      CRIMINOLOGY                                          Managing Editor
      Dept. of Criminology & Criminal Justice         CRIMINOLOGY
      2220 Lefrak Hall                                           Dept. of Criminology & Criminal Justice
      University of Maryland                                  2220 Lefrak Hall
      College Park, MD 20742                                University of Maryland
      301-405-4724 (p)                                           301-405-8314 (p)
      301-314-5939 (f)                                      
sbacon@crim.umd.edu
     
rpaternoster@crim.umd.edu 
 



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