期刊名称:JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND DEVELOPMENT

ISSN:1408-6980
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:PALGRAVE MACMILLAN LTD, BRUNEL RD BLDG, HOUNDMILLS, BASINGSTOKE, ENGLAND, HANTS, RG21 6XS
  出版社网址:http://www.palgrave-journals.com/pal/index.html
期刊网址:http://www.palgrave-journals.com/jird/index.html
影响因子: 0.732(2015年) 0.767(2014年) 0.561(2013年) 0.553 (2012年)
主题范畴:INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS;    POLITICAL SCIENCE

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



About the journal

JIRD is an independent and internationally peer-reviewed journal in international relations and international political economy. It publishes articles on contemporary world politics and the global political economy from a variety of methodologies and approaches.

The journal, whose history goes back to 1984, has been established to encourage scholarly publications by authors coming from Central/Eastern Europe. Open to all scholars since its refoundation in the late 1990s, yet keeping this initial aim, it applied a rigorous peer-review system and became the official journal of the Central and East European International Studies Association (CEEISA).

JIRD seeks original manuscripts that provide theoretically informed empirical analyses of issues in international relations and international political economy, as well as original theoretical or conceptual analyses.


Instructions to Authors

Submission of manuscripts

JIRD publishes original, peer-reviewed manuscripts that provide theoretically informed empirical analyses of issues in international relations and international political economy, as well as original theoretical or conceptual analyses.

Manuscripts should be submitted to jird@fdv.uni-lj.si, preferably in Word format. The title page should be a separate file, or may be included in the covering e-mail.

In extreme circumstances we will accept paper submissions, but this may considerably delay the review of the paper. Authors should submit five copies of their article (with any original illustrations and including all references and notes) to:

  • Journal of International Relations and Development
    Editorial Office
    Centre of International Relations
    Faculty of Social Sciences
    PO Box 2547
    SI-1001 LJUBLJANA
    SLOVENIA

Authors should confirm at point of submission that their article is not under consideration for publication elsewhere.

Presentation of the paper

Articles should be in English, typed in double spacing (including all notes and references).
Articles should not normally exceed 12,000 words in length.

Authors are requested to send two electronic versions of their article on disk, preferably as a Word file (for details, see below). For paper submissions, it is important that the manuscript should be an exact printout of what is on the disk.

When you submit your article, please also attach:

  • an abstract of 150 - 200 words, in English, stating precisely the topic under consideration, the method of argument used in addressing the topic, and the conclusions reached;
  • a list of up to six keywords suitable for indexing and abstracting services;
  • a word count at the end of the manuscript, together with the date of the manuscript;
  • a full postal and e-mail address, as well as telephone and fax numbers for the author. If the manuscript is co-authored, then please provide the requested information for the corresponding author;
  • on a separate sheet, provide a brief biographical note about each author, including current institutional affiliation, research interests and any recent and/or forthcoming publications.

All articles are refereed; they undergo a double-blind peer review. At least two external referees review manuscripts. JIRD reserves the right to reject any manuscript as being unsuitable in topic, style or form without requesting an external review.

In order to ensure anonymity during the peer-review process, the name(s), title(s), and full affiliation(s) of the author(s) should only appear on a separate cover sheet, together with her/his preferred mailing address, e-mail address, telephone and fax numbers.

JIRD reserves the right to edit or otherwise alter all contributions, but authors will receive proofs for approval before publication.

Style guidelines

Below are some guidelines for in-text citations, notes, and references, which authors may find useful when preparing manuscripts for submission.

Manuscript style guidelines

In order to preserve anonymity during the peer review process, we ask authors to include two files in their first submissions. One file is destined for the referee process and should omit obvious references to their own publications (e.g. 'As I argued in my 2001 article, XXX') as well as other indications that may reveal their identity. The second file, which will be used for editorial purposes, should include all self-references

Authors are urged to write as concisely as possible, but not at the expense of clarity. Descriptive or explanatory passages, necessary for information but which tend to break up the flow of text, should appear in endnotes designated in the text by superscript (consecutive Arabic numerals). Please do not use footnotes.

Long quotations of about five lines should be indented and single-spaced without quotes. Authors should be aware, however, of the fair usage principle when quoting other authors' works. Longer quotations of the work of other authors - more than five lines - will be discouraged in principle.

Numbers of 11 and higher should be in figures.

Dates should be in the form of 5 September, 1990; 1994-1998; or, the 1990s.

References in the text

In the text, refer to the author(s) name(s) (without initials, unless there are two authors with the same name) and year of publication. Unpublished data and personal communications should include initials and year. Publications which have not yet appeared are given a probable year of publication and should be checked at proof stage on author query sheet.

  • Example:

    Since Paterson (1983) has shown that ... This is in results attained later (Kramer, 1984, 16). Results have been reported (Robinson, 1989, personal communication) which suggest ....

  • Publications by the same author(s) in the same year should be identified with a, b, c (1974a, 1990b) closed up to the year and separated by commas. Publications in references which include different authors are separated by a semicolon (Miller 1994a: 32, 1994b: Gordon 1976). If the year of first publication by a particular author is important, use the form (e.g. Marx 1857/1973: 31). If there are two authors for a publication, put both names separated by 'and' (not &). If there are more than two authors, put the name of the first author followed by 'et al.' References to unauthorised material on the Internet must be given in brackets in the text or endnotes, not in the reference list. The full URL must be given as well as the date of access.

  • Example:

    (www.nature.com/onc/v18/n1/1234567.html (15 July, 2003))

  • References to unauthorized data from periodical publications may be also given in brackets in the text together with the exact page(s).

  • Example:

    '(quoted in Europe Magazine (July 1998): 8).'

If such a reference is included in the reference list, a title of a contribution you are referring to must be provided, While a short title without inverted commas and a year of publication is used for in-text-referencing (e.g. Short title 1999). As a general rule, an exact web address of a particular article substitutes its exact page(s).

List of References

References are placed in alphabetical order of authors. Examples of correct forms of references for alphabetical style:

  • BOOKS:

    Single authored books:

    Gunnel, John G. (1998) The Orders of Discourse: Philosophy, Social Science and Politics, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

    Two or more authors:

    Altvater, Elmar and Birgit Mahnkopf (2000) Grenzen der Globalisierung: Ökonomie, Ökologie und Politik in der Weltgesellschaft, M¨¹nster: Westfälisches Dampfboot.

  • EDITED VOLUMES:

    Rittberger, Volker, ed. (1993) Regime Theory and International Relations, Oxford: Clarendon Press.

  • CHAPTERS FROM MONOGRAPHS:

    Lijphart, Arendt (1990) 'Democratic Political Systems', in Anton Bebler and Jim Seroka, eds. Contemporary Political Systems: Classifications and Typologies, 117-34, Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers.

  • JOURNAL ARTICLES:

    Printed journals:

    Jackson, Robert H. (1992) 'Juridical Statehood in Sub-Saharan Africa', Journal of International Affairs 46(1): 1-16.

    Online editions of journals:

    Hoffmann, Stanley (2003b) 'America Goes Backward', The New York Review of Books 50(10), available at http://www.nybooks.com/articles/16350 (2 November, 2003).

  • NEWSPAPER ARTICLES:

    Printed editions:

    Daalder, Ivo and James M. Lindsay (2003) 'American Empire, Not "If" but "What Kind"', The New York Times (10 May): B9.

    Online editions:

    Cooper, Robert (2002) 'Why We Still Need Empires', The Guardian Unlimited, 7 April, available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4388915,00.html (2 November, 2003).

  • MAGAZINE ARTICLES:

    Kaplan, Robert (2003) 'Supremacy by Stealth: Ten Rules for Managing the World', The Atlantic Monthly (July/August): 65-83.

    Elliott, Michael (2002) 'The Trouble With Saving the World', Time (30 December): 108.

  • RESEARCH REPORTS AND PAPERS FROM CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS:

    Szakolzai, Arp¨¢d (1994) 'Thinking Beyond the East-West Divide: Patocka, Faucault, Hamvas, Elias, and the Care of the Self', Florence: European University Institute, EUI Working Papers in Political and Social Sciences, No. 94/2.

Spelling

Use either US or UK spellings consistently throughout. For UK spellings, take as a guide the new edition of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary and the Oxford Dictionary for Writers and Editors; Websters Collegiate for US spellings. UK spellings will therefore prefer -ize to -ise, as a verb ending (e.g., realize, specialize, recognize, etc.).

Illustrations and tables

Supply tables, figures and plates on separate sheets at the end of the article, with their position within the text clearly indicated on the page where they are introduced. Provide typed captions for figures and plates (including sources and acknowledgements) on a separate sheet. Electronic versions should be saved in separate files to the main body of text and should be saved in either TIFF or JPEG format.

Authors are asked to present tables with the minimum use of horizontal rules (usually three are sufficient) and avoiding vertical rules except in matrices. It is important to provide clear copies of figures (not photocopies or faxes) which can be reproduced by the printer and do not require redrawing. Photographs should be preferably black and white glossy prints with a wide tonal range.

Proofs

These are received as PDF attachments to an email to only the first (or corresponding) author of a multi-authored article. Please print the PDF attachment, correct your proofs within the time period indicated and return your proofs as directed. Please make no revisions to the final, edited text, except where the copy editor has requested clarification.

Offprints

A copy of the printed journal and article offprints (25, to be shared with any co-authors) are dispatched to the corresponding author shortly after publication.

Copyright

Clearing Permissions. Authors are responsible for obtaining permission from copyright holders for reproducing through any medium of communication those illustrations, tables, figures or lengthy quotations previously published elsewhere. Add your acknowledgements to the typescript, preferably in the form of an Acknowledgements section at the end of the paper. Credit the source and copyright of photographs or figures in the accompanying captions.

The journal's policy is to own copyright in all contributions. Before publication, authors assign copyright to the Publishers, but retain their rights to republish this material in other works written or edited by themselves subject to full acknowledgement of the original source of publication.

The journal mandates the Copyright Clearance Center in the USA and the Copyright Licensing Agency in the UK to offer centralised licensing arrangements for photocopying in their respective territories.


Editorial Board

Editor-in-Chief

Patrick Thaddeus Jackson, American University, USA

Associate Editors

Petr Drul¨¢k, Institute of International Relations, Prague, Czech Republic
George Lawson, London School of Economics, UK
Sherrill Stroschein, University College London, UK
Antje Vetterlein, University of Essex, UK and Copenhagen Business School, Denmark

International Advisory Board

Emanuel Adler, University of Toronto
Paul Dragos Aligica, George Mason University and National School for Political Studies and Public Administration, Bucharest
Filippo Andreatta, Universit¨¤ di Parma
Alexander Astrov, Central European University, Budapest and University of Tartu
Bertrand Badie, Institut d'Études Politiques de Paris
Wolfgang Benedek, University of Graz
Eiki Berg, University of Tartu
Dider Bigo, Institut d'Études Politiques de Paris
Milan Brglez, University of Ljubljana
L¨¢szl¨® Bruszt, European University Institute
Bojko Bučar, University of Ljubljana
Charles Bukowski, Bradley University
Lars-Erik Cederman, ETH Z¨¹rich
Jeffrey Checkel, University of Oslo
Jaap de Wilde, University of Groningen
Paul F. Diehl, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Alexander Duleba, Slovak Foreign Policy Association, Bratislava
Matthew Evangelista, Cornell University
Tuomas Forsberg, University of Helsinki
Annette Freyberg-Inan, University of Amsterdam
Randall Germain, Carleton University
Stefano Guzzini, Danish Institute for International Studies, Copenhagen and Uppsala University
Lene Hansen, University of Copenhagen
Colin Hay, University of Sheffield
Eric Helleiner, University of Waterloo
Christopher Hill, Cambridge University
Ted Hopf, Ohio State University
Aida A. Hozić, University of Florida
Jef Huysmans, Open University, Milton Keynes
Markus Jachtenfuchs, Hertie School of Governance, Berlin
Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University
Robert O. Keohane, Princeton University
L¨¢szl¨® J. Kiss, Teleki Institute, Budapest and Andrassy Universität, Budapest
Friedrich Kratochwil, European University Institute
Keith Krause, Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva
Vendulka Kub¨¢lkov¨¢, University of Miami
Merje Kuus, University of British Columbia, Vancouver
Yosef Lapid, New Mexico State University
Zuzana Lehmanov¨¢, University of Economics, Prague
Margot Light, London School of Economics and Political Science
Peter Mayer, University of Bremen
Andrei Melville, MGIMO, Moscow
Helen Milner, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University
Andrew Moravcsik, Princeton University
Iulia Motoc, University of Bucharest
Craig Murphy, Wellesley College
Iver Neumann, University of Oslo
Heikki Patomäki, University of Helsinki
Zlatko Šabic, Centre of International Relations, University of Ljubljana
Frank Schimmelfennig, ETH Z¨¹rich
Jan Aart Scholte, University of Warwick
Jiř¨ª Šedivý, NATO Headquarters, Brussels
Alexander Sergounin, University of Nizhny Novgorod
Steve Smith, University of Exeter
Džemal Sokolović, University of Bergen
Elzbieta Stadtm¨¹ller, University of Wroclaw
Jennifer Sterling-Folker, University of Connecticut
Marjan Svetličič, University of Ljubljana
Biljana Vankovska, University of Skopje
John Vasquez, Colgate University
Vatroslav Vekarić, Institute of International Politics and Economics, Belgrade
Gedeminas Vitkus, University of Vilnius
Thomas J. Volgy, University of Arizona
Radovan Vukadinović, University of Zagreb
Jutta Weldes, University of Bristol
Alexander Wendt, Ohio State University
William Wohlforth, Dartmouth College
Maja Zehfuß, University of Manchester
Michael Z¨¹rn, Hertie School of Governance, Berlin

Managing Editors

Ana Bojinović
Priya Dixit
Sabina Kajnč
Mateja Peter


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