期刊名称:JOURNAL OF LATIN AMERICAN AND CARIBBEAN ANTHROPOLOGY

ISSN:1935-4932
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:WILEY, 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN, USA, NJ, 07030-5774
  出版社网址:https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com
期刊网址:https://anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/19354940
主题范畴:ANTHROPOLOGY
变更情况:Newly Added by 2019

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



About the journal

Aims and Scope

The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology (JLACA) is a peer-reviewed journal of anthropological research on Latin America and the Caribbean. JLACA publishes original research grounded in ethnography in different article formats. The Journal welcomes contributions that integrate interdisciplinary approaches and methodologies with ethnographic processes of knowledge production. The JLACA maintains an inclusive geographical scope that includes diasporic populations throughout the Americas and the world. The journal’s purview also includes global processes that effect or interconnect not only different regions or nations within the Americas but also the Americas with other world geographic regions. 

JLACA’s mission, as a publication of the American Anthropological Association, is to provide a venue for anthropologists of all subfields and topical-thematic areas within sociocultural anthropology, social archaeology, sociolinguistics, ethnohistory, bio-physical anthropology—as well as for scholars of cognate disciplines—who are engaged in the critical study of social and cultural processes in Latin America and the Caribbean. To reach a broader international readership and base of contributing authors, JLACA’s mandate includes publishing in English, Spanish and Portuguese.


Journal History

SLACA began as a separate non-profit organization that was incorporated in the early 80’s in Texas with the name SLAA—Society for Latin American Anthropology. In 1984 it merged into the American Anthropology Association (AAA)—as did many independent anthropological associations at this time. As a section of the AAA, SLAA—Society for Latin American Anthropology—remained with the same name until the current name was assigned in 2006. 


The initial journal publication of the independent SLAA was the 1976 one volume/one issue of the Contributions of the Latin American Anthropology Group. This was published with support from the Institute for Mesoamerican Studies (IMS) based at the University at Albany. SLAA launched an anthology book series in 1983, which issued 14 edited titles, and The Latin American Anthropology Review in 1989, which published book reviews in six volumes (two issues a year) until 1994.


The Society for Latin American Anthropology launched a research journal with the title, Journal of Latin American Anthropology in 1995. The journal title was changed to Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology or JLACA in 2007 volume 12. With the exception of volume 1 (1996), the journal was published in two issues a year from inception until 2011. JLACA began to publish three issues a volume starting in 2012. JLACA, along with other AAA journal publications, became fully online in 2016-2017. The JLACA Editors and SLACA Board have targeted 2020, the jubilee 25th anniversary, as the target date to become a quarterly journal.


Keywords

Latin America, Caribbean, Anthropology, American Anthropological Association, AAA, journal, anthropology journal, Journal of Latin American & Caribbean Anthropology, JLCA, JLACA, Society for Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology, SLAA, LAAR, The Latin American Anthropology Review, Contributions of the Latin American Anthropology Group


Abstracting and Indexing Information

  • Academic OneFile (GALE Cengage)
  • Anthropological Literature (Harvard University)
  • ArticleFirst (OCLC)
  • Caribbean Search (EBSCO Publishing)
  • eHRAF: World Cultures (HRAF)
  • Electronic Collections Online (OCLC)
  • Expanded Academic ASAP (GALE Cengage)
  • IBR & IBZ: International Bibliographies of Periodical Literature (KG Saur)
  • IBSS: International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (ProQuest)
  • MLA International Bibliography (MLA)
  • OmniFile Full Text Mega Edition (HW Wilson)
  • OmniFile Full Text Select (HW Wilson)
  • ProQuest Central (ProQuest)
  • ProQuest Research Library (ProQuest)
  • ProQuest Social Science Journals (ProQuest)
  • SCOPUS (Elsevier)
  • Social Sciences Abstracts (EBSCO Publishing)
  • SocINDEX (EBSCO Publishing)
  • Sociological Abstracts (ProQuest)
  • TOC Premier (EBSCO Publishing)
  • Worldwide Political Sciences Abstracts (ProQuest)

 


Instructions to Authors

The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology publishes original scholarship in English, Spanish and Portuguese. JLACA publishes the following types of articles:

  • Provocations / Provocaciones / Provações
  • Events - Sucesos al Momento
  • Research Articles
  • Dossiers
  • In-Focus Issues
  • SLACA Awards and Keynotes
  • Reviews
  • Current Call for Papers
Provocations / Provocaciones / Provações

The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology invites submissions for articles that critically challenge, extend and reformulate current thinking and research in all areas of Latin American and Caribbean anthropology. Provocations are based on rigorous argumentation and grounded in the ethnographic, historical and material realities of Latin America and the Caribbean.  Authors are welcome to explore innovative modes and rhetorics of writing—including the use of images, sound recordings and multi-media—as well as to work within inherited styles and text-based forms of ethnography. Under this  submission category, JLACA accepts manuscripts with an array of aims or genre forms. This includes, for example, articles that: 

  • create or question experimental, visual or multi-media ethnographies
  • explore, critique or propose analytical or interpretive methodologies, fieldwork methods, or inter- and intra-disciplinary strategies
  • deliberate, debate or construct theoretical tools, concepts or frameworks of understanding or explanation of ethnographic realities
  • engage in and advance collaborative processes of exchange with scholarly, cultural, or other types of communities and social organizations
  • interpret and explain alternative histories, possible futures or emergent imaginaries
  • interrogate basic assumptions and ideas of Latin America and the Caribbean as regions and as anthropological objects of inquiry in relation to global processes
  • connect different anthropological subfields or integrate other social science and humanities approaches into an expanded anthropological horizon.
Provocations/Provocaciones/Provações is a venue for anthropologists to develop, propose and debate new ways of thinking, doing, visualizing, and experiencing anthropological research in Latin America and the Caribbean. Articles present compelling arguments and evidence for rethinking issues that are or that the author argues should be of major significance for Latin American and Caribbean anthropology. In publishing these Provocations / Provocaciones / Provações, the Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology seeks to establish its role as a premier journal that guides and shapes the present and future ways of doing anthropological research in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Manuscripts cannot normally exceed 10,000 total number of words and three images. Alternatively, authors can limit their word count to 8000 words with four to ten images that are published with the article in Wiley/Anthrosource. Supplementary video and audio that are integral to the article—as well as images in addition to the above limit—can be made accessible on the JLACA designated platform via hypertext links. 

Events - Sucesos al Momento

On occasion the Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology can fast track the review process of manuscripts that offer time-sensitive sociopolitical commentaries and cultural analyses of current, emergent events. Manuscript submissions are between 4000 and 7000 words with limit of six images. Authors are encouraged to use supplementary audio and video materials that would be published on the JLACA designated online platform.

This category type of publication focuses on events that are happening “now” in the present moment as objects of ethnographic description. We take events in the most inclusive sense to include key moments that are not only overtly political or economic or that reference to dominant agents or processes of history (such as the State, Class, Race or capitalism, globalization, etc.). We also understand events to include those less visible conjunctures of quotidian life that are more often marked as “cultural” or “social.” JLACA therefore encourages authors to conceptualize and explain the notion of “event” that they use to ground their description, argument and analytical commentary. 


Submissions of this type should provide historical and ethnographic description of the event and its contexts as the means to explore encompassing significance in terms, for example, of global interconnections, comparative dynamics, or possible futures. We encourage deliberations on how the event relates to processes found in or connected to other global regions and contexts beyond the Americas; or, how the event may motivate critical assessment of the idea of Latin America and Caribbean as regions. 

 

Research Articles

 

The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology invites submissions based on original, ethnographic research in any area of anthropology. We welcome articles that are interdisciplinary in nature, such as that integrate fieldwork, methodologies, research issues, and conceptual frameworks from related disciplines, such as history, or from different anthropological subfields. Articles are expected to have a theoretical focus, a conceptual argument, grounding in current literatures, and to contribute new understandings of the contemporary sociohistorical realities of Latin America and the Caribbean.

 

The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology is leading venue for the publication of ethnographic research. We understand anthropology in an inclusive sense to encompass all subfields.  The editors especially want to encourage authors working on questions that are historically under-represented in JLACA, such as:

  • Articles related to the Caribbean, Caribbean diaspora, and global interconnections of Caribbean with other world regions.
  • Articles that focus on art, aesthetics and cultural production that integrate analytical methodologies from other humanities disciplines into an ethnographic-historical approach.
  • Articleson archaeological or biophysical materialities, histories, discourses, practices, and interpretations as these are connected to ethnographically accessible sociocultural or sociolinguistic processes. 
  • Articles that explore and reframe the interfaces, connections and similarities– differences between anthropologies associated with rubrics of applied, practicing, and basic research.
    •  

Research articles are limited to 8000 total words, including endnotes, bibliography, tables, charts, captions, and body of text. Authors are encouraged to make use of images, which are limited to three. It is suggested that author’s seeking to use more than 3 images should consider submitting their manuscript under the Provocations / Provocaciones category.


Dossiers

Dossiers are groupings of articles that have been individually submitted and accepted. These groupings are determined by the Editor in Chief on the basis of shared content, such as research problems, themes, or frameworks.  The editorial staff seeks to publish articles that have been accepted for publication in ways that enhance the searchability and contribution of these articles. The designation and assignment of articles to a dossier is wholly within the jurisdiction of the editorial staff. In other words dossiers are not initiated by authors. If you are interested in organizing a special issue to be considered for In-Focus Issue please review the criteria below.


In-Focus 
Issues

The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology invites the submission of proposals for an In–Focus Special Issue consisting of articles dealing with a shared research issue or problem. Individually and as a group the articles should deepen our knowledge of particular situations based in grounded research: The focus on and exploration of a particular issue in specific ethnographic and historical contexts can pivot our thinking on, approach to, or understandings of the issues in question. 

These collections should approximate 40,000 total words divided into three to six articles, typically consisting of four Research Articles (see description above; 7-8000 words maximum and three images) as well as an Introduction and a concluding Critical Commentary / Reflections (4-6,000 words each). Authors are encouraged to integrate images or other supplementary audio and visual materials into their analyses. An alternative model is three Provocation type submissions (see description above; 10,000 words maximum), plus an Introduction and a concluding Critical Commentary / Reflections (5,000 words maximum each). 

Organizers and authors wishing to integrate extensive use of audio, visual or audiovisual materials are encouraged. They should include a separate brief paragraph that clarifies the types and quantities of each medium and how they contribute to the argument, evidence or analysis in order to determine specific limitations for the individual and collective submissions.

Introductions and concluding Critical Commentary/Reflections should underscore the significant, value and contribution of the articles and collection as a whole. These “book-end” texts go beyond a summary re-statement of the content of other articles that comprise the collection and must include some broader analytical argument that reviews and assesses existing research on the topics, theories, methods, problems or issues that are the primary concern of In Focus articles. They should have significant discussion of an analytical and historical perspective on how the key issues or problems have been studied in the past, how the In Focus articles work with, against, differently than these historical tendencies of scholarship, and what kinds of future questions emerge to guide us (or that we should avoid).  Introductions and Critical Commentary/Reflections must be submitted for review at the same date (within a 2-3 day window) as the other articles that comprise the In Focus collection. 

Each article is evaluated individually in the established review process. Authors interested in organizing an In–Focus Special Issue should submit proposals to the Editor in Chief by email. Proposal should in Calisto or Times Roman, single spaced and include a statement, not exceeding 2 pages, that describes the proposed collection in terms of the research problems addressed, the unity of proposed articles, the contribution and significance of the collection; a list of proposed authors, including the titles, abstracts (200 words max), region or national location of the research, and projected word size of each proposed article. 

In Focus Issues are also initiated and coordinated by the JLACA editorial team.

JLACA is actively seeking proposals for In-Focus Issues that explore one or more of the JLACA Jubilee themes as elaborated in the Jubilee 25 year anniversary Call for Papers.

 

SLACA Awards and Keynotes

The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology periodically publishes specially designated articles that are commissioned by the SLACA Board or the JLACA Editor in Chief. These include short commentaries on timely issues; keynote addresses or special presentations derived from AAA sessions organized by the SLACA Board or presented at the SLACA bi-annual conference; and articles receiving a prize that are competitively awarded by the Society for Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology. The journal does not accept unsolicited manuscripts for this category of article.


Reviews

JLACA publishes critically engaged reviews of current scholarship in Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology that is expressed in an array of formats and media. 

  • Film Reviews are reviews of films released within the last five years.
  • Museum Exhibit Reviews are reviews of openings within the last five years.
  • Website Reviews of ethnographic websites.
  • Conference Reviews of scholarly meetings held within the last two years.
  • Cultural Productions or events that are especially significant for anthropological commentary.
  • Book Reviews are reviews of books published within the last five years.
  • Book Review Essays of two to three recent books linked by a common theme.

The journal does not accept unsolicited reviews.

Persons interested in writing a review for JLACA should contact the Reviews Editor by email. 

JLACA especially welcomes proposals for reviews of websites, exhibits, research conferences, and other non-traditional forms of scholarship. As well, JLACA is interested to receive proposals for reviews of significant cultural productions that are worthy of anthropological commentary, discussion, and engagement.

As of March 21, 2019, JLACA uses ScholarOne platform for all invited reviews.

JLACA Reviews Editor

Beatriz Reyes-Foster

Presses or Authors should send copies of Books and Films for JLACA Reviews to:

Beatriz Reyes-Foster

Reviews Editor

c/o Department of Anthropology

Howard Phillips Hall Room 309

4000 Central Florida Blvd

Orlando, FL 32816-1361

Beatriz.Reyes-Foster@ucf.edu


Editorial Board

Editorial Office

General Inquiries: jlaca@gmu.edu


Quetzil E. Castañeda, Editor-in-Chief 
Indiana University; Open School of Ethnography and Anthropology (OSEA) 
jlaca.editor@osea-cite.org


Associate Editors

Lisa C. Breglia, George Mason University

Carla Guerrón Montero, University of Delaware

Jason Pribilsky, Whitman College

Daniel Renfrew, West Virginia University


Reviews Editor

Beatriz Reyes-Foster, University of Central Florida

Beatriz.Reyes-Foster@ucf.edu


Editorial Assistant

Jessica Smith, George Mason University


Editorial Board, 2019

Ana Mariella Bacigalupo, 2016-2020. SUNY-Buffalo
Lisa C. Breglia, ex officio. George Mason University
Ronda L. Brulotte, ex officio. University of New Mexico
Hortensia Caballero Arias, 2016-2020. Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas
Jeremy M. Campbell, 2017-2021. Roger Williams University
Quetzil E. Castañeda, ex officio. Indiana University; The Open School of Ethnography and Anthropology
Rudi Colloredo-Mansfeld, University of North Carolina
Beth Conklin, 2017-2021. Vanderbilt University
Kathleen Fine-Dare, 2016-2020. Fort Lewis College
Edward F. Fischer, 2019-2023. Vanderbilt University
Patricia Fortuny, 2019-2023. CIESAS Peninsular
Chris Garces, ex officio, Universidad San Francisco de Quito
Laura R. Graham, ending 2020. University of Iowa
Carla Guerrón Montero, ex officio. University of Delaware
Kiran C. Jayaram, 2019-2022. University of South Florida
Myriam Jimeno, 2016-2020. Universidad Nacional de Colombia
Ashley Kistler, ending 2021. Rollins College
Jessaca B. Leinaweaver, 2016-2020. Brown University
Bruce Mannheim, 2017-2021. University of Michigan
David Nugent, 2019-2023. Emory University
Stephan Palmié, 2016-2020. University of Chicago
Silvia Posocco, 2019-2023. University of London Birkbeck
Jason Pribilsky, Whitman College
John Pulis, 2017-2021. Hofstra University
Daniel Renfrew, ex officio. West Virginia University
Beatriz Reyes-Foster, ex officio. University of Central Florida
Clare A. Sammells ex officio. Bucknell University
Linda J. Seligmann, ending 2020. George Mason University
Jessica L. Smith, ex officio. George Mason University
Timothy J. Smith, 2013-2019. Appalachian State University
Gabriela Vargas Cetina, 2012-2019. Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán
Pirjo Kristina Virtanen, 2012-2019. University of Helsinki
Peter Wade, 2012-2019. University of Manchester


Past Editors

Linda J. Seligmann, 2015-2018 
Andrew Canessa, 2008-2015 
Jean Muteba Rahier, 2003-2007 
Mary Weismantel, 2000-2003 
Wendy Weiss, 1995-2000

Please visit the SLACA website for Past JLACA Editorial Boards


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