期刊名称:CRITICAL ASIAN STUDIES

ISSN:1467-2715
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON, ENGLAND, OXON, OX14 4RN
  出版社网址:http://www.bcasnet.org/ccas-sop.htm
期刊网址:http://www.bcasnet.org/
影响因子: 0.433(2015年) 0.673(2014年) 0.308(2013年) 0.309 (2012年) 0.42(2011年)
主题范畴:AREA STUDIES

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



About the journal
BCAS / CAS AIMS & SCOPE

Critical Asian Studies (formerly the Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars) is a peer-reviewed quarterly journal that welcomes unsolicited essays, reviews, translations, interviews, photo essays, and letters about Asia and the Pacific, particularly those that challenge the accepted formulas for understanding the Asia and Pacific regions, the world, and ourselves. Published now by Routledge Journals, part of the Taylor & Francis Group, Critical Asian Studies remains true to the mission that was articulated for the journal in 1967 by the Committee of Concerned Asian Scholars:

  • to develop a humane and knowledgeable understanding of Asian societies and their efforts to maintain cultural integrity and to confront such problems as poverty, oppression, and imperialism
  • to create alternatives to the prevailing trends in scholarship on Asia, which too often spring from a parochial cultural perspective and serve selfish interests and expansionism
    In this spirit Critical Asian Studies welcomes submissions that challenge the accepted formulas for understanding the Asia and Pacific regions, the world, and ourselves.
BCAS / CAS STATEMENT OF PURPOSE

The world -- and Asia -- are far different today from what they were three decades ago. Many of our original concerns remain, but many new challenges confront us as well. As we put this name change into effect we affirm the continuity of our efforts and voice our recognition of the new conditions we face.
We have chosen the new name Critical Asian Studies because it captures four different aspects of our endeavor:

  • it acknowledges that the issues we wish to confront in the twenty-first century are critical;
  • it highlights our continued commitment as activists and scholars to the search for critical perspectives on local, regional, and global change;
  • it articulates our criticism of the status quo; and
  • it signals our self-critical assessments of the ways in which our efforts affect the world in which we live.

The Bulletin was born out of the crisis of the Indochina Wars as an attempt to analyze U.S. policy in cold war Asia. Our initial focus was on the impact of U.S. power on the peoples of Southeast and East Asia -- and the efforts of Asian people to define their own past, present, and future along different lines, including anti-imperialist and revolutionary ones. We later expanded our geographic focus to include South Asia, Inner Asia, and nations in the Pacific, as well as the experience of Asians in America. Our goals explicitly included examining the intellectual approaches by which Asia was understood in the West and the ways in which reigning theoretical frameworks in universities and professional institutions excluded Asian aspirations and experiences. Those goals, spelled out in our original statement of purpose, remain central to our scholarship.

Since the 1970s, the regional and global contexts have changed profoundly. New realities include growing multi-polarity, the greater economic power of East Asia, the end of the cold war, the decline of revolutionary Marxism, and the rise of new social movements. The Bulletin has responded to these ongoing developments by combining analyses of the international forces that have transformed the Asia-Pacific region with attention to social change within Asian societies and to the many ways in which the global and the local intersect.

In part, our interest in domestic social change within Asian societies means learning from the work of scholars and activists in Asia, a goal we have held for many years but will stress more in the years ahead. The "Notes from the Field" section in the journal (and on our website: ) contains information about contemporary political activism and social movements in Asia. This effort is part of our ongoing commitment to write and publish in the increasingly international, interdisciplinary field of Asian Studies. We continue to encourage creative work at the intersection of scholarship and activism.

We draw inspiration from a variety of intellectual approaches: these include environmentalism, feminism, cultural analyses, human rights concepts, participatory development, political economy, studies of race and ethnicity, and movements for the rights of indigenous peoples. Thirty years ago, socialism provided powerful critiques of both capitalism and "traditional" Asian social organization. Those critiques raised valuable questions about power, exploitation, and oppression without providing sufficient answers, but the historical tradition of socialist thought remains a source of inspiration for some of us, together with newer analytical tools. We continue to debate various alternatives to global capitalism as it currently exists.

We agree that attractive alternatives to contemporary systems would be based on social foundations of cooperation rather than competition and of use values as well as exchange values. The alternatives would also result in development that is human in a broad sense rather than narrowly defined in highly unequal economic terms. We remain committed to human rights, democracy, social justice, self-determination, and equality.


Instructions to Authors
IMPORTANT NOTICE

Beginning with volume 38 (2006) the editors of Critical Asian Studies are implementing a new system of footnotes and references in the journal. We are also reducing the number of printed copies of manuscripts we require for submission: from three to one (plus a digital version on a CD or diskette).

Authors interested in submitting a manuscript to Critical Asian Studies are strongly encouraged to download, read, and follow our Author Guidelines


Instructions to Authors
cas-author-guidelines.pdf

Editorial Board
Editors
Patricio Abinales Kyoto University, Japan
Martin Hart-Landsberg Lewis and Clark College, USA
Laura E. Hein Northwestern University, USA
David Seddon University of East Anglia, UK
Alvin Y. So Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, China
Peter Zarrow Academica Sinica, Taiwan

Managing Editor
Thomas P. Fenton

Editorial Board
Doug Allen, Leonora C. Angeles, Linda Gail Arrigo, Peter Bell, Ashok Bhargava, Uradyn E. Bulag, Gene Cooper, Richard Franke, Mobo Gao, Hassan Gardezi, A. Tom Grunfeld, Ellen Hammond, Ron Herring, Ronald R. Janssen, Richard Kagan, Rebecca Karl, Ben Kiernan, Jeff Kingston, Hagen Koo, Stephanie Lawson, John Lie, Tai-Lok Lui, Duncan McCargo, Richard Madsen, Joe Moore, Donald M. Nonini, Gail Omvedt, Ravi Arvind Palat, Mustapha K. Pasha, Niti Pawakapan, John Price, V.K. Ramachandran, Carl Riskin, Jennifer Robertson, Sonia Ryang, Ratna Saptari, David Satterwhite, James Seymour, Stephen R. Shalom, Hari Sharma, Miriam Sharma, Robert Stauffer, Yuki Tanaka, Richard Tanter, Joe Tharamangalam, Sylvia Tiwon, Carl Trocki, Jonathan Unger, Peter Van Ness, Wang Hui, Linda Yarr, Marilyn Young

Advisory Board
Nina Adams, Asoka Bandarage, Amrita Basu, Paresh Chattopadhyay, Helen Chauncey, Noam Chomsky, Bruce Cumings, Robert Cribb, John W. Dower, Jana Everett, John T. Junkerman, Benedict J. Kerkvliet, Victor Lippit, Ngo Vinh Long, Robert Marks, Jim Matson, Maurice Meisner, Kristin Pelzer, Moss Roberts, Vera Schwarcz, Mark Selden, Saundra Sturdevant, Steve Thomas, Michael Vickery, Jayne S. Werner, Martha K. Winnacker

Webster
Stephen R. Shalom

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