期刊名称:JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES

ISSN:0022-0388
出版频率:Monthly
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.routledge.com/
期刊网址:http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/00220388.asp
影响因子: 0.896(2015年) 0.983(2014年) 0.714(2013年) 0.872 (2012年) 0.794(2011年)
主题范畴:DEVELOPMENT STUDIES;    ECONOMICS

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



About the journal
The Journal of Development Studies was the first and is one of the best known international journals in the area of development studies. Since its foundation in 1964, it has published many seminal articles on development and opened up many new areas of debate. We invite articles from across academic disciplines, but priority is given to papers which are:
  • interdisciplinary
  • provide critical tests, based on empirical work, of alternative theories, perspectives or schools of thought
  • relevant to important issues in development economics, politics and policy.

The editors also welcome critical surveys of the literature in important fields of development policy and practice. Each issue keeps the reader up-to-date with the latest research and also contains reviews of recently-published books on development.


Instructions to Authors

The Journal of Development Studies is a refereed journal.

Articles submitted to The Journal of Development Studies should be original contributions and should not be under consideration for any other publication at the same time. If another version of the article is under consideration by another publication, or has been, or will be published elsewhere, authors should clearly indicate this at the time of submission.

Each manuscript should be submitted electronically in Word format or in triplicate to Judi Minost (JDS Administrative Editor), Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, Brighton BN1 9RE, UK; Email: J.Minost@ids.ac.uk. Articles should be typewritten on one side only, double-spaced and with ample margins. All pages (including those containing any diagrams and tables) should be numbered consecutively.

There is no standard length for articles but 8,000 to 10,000 words (including notes and references) is a useful target. The articles should begin with an indented and italicised summary of around 100 words, which should describe the main arguments and conclusions of the article.

As papers are sent out anonymously, the name of the authors should not appear on the paper itself, only the title and the abstract. Please include a separate cover sheet with details of authors' institutional affiliation, full address and other contact details. Any acknowledgements should also be included as should a note of the exact length of the article.

All diagrams, charts and graphs should be referred to as figures and consecutively numbered. Tables should be kept to a minimum and contain only essential data. Each figure and table must be given an Arabic numeral, followed by a heading, and be referred to in the text.

Following acceptance for publication, articles should be submitted electronically in Word format. To facilitate typesetting, notes should be grouped together at the end of the file. Tables should also be placed at the end of the file. Any diagrams or maps should be copied to a separate disk in uncompressed .TIF or .JPG formats in individual files. These should be prepared in black and white. Tints should be avoided; use open patterns instead.

It is the author's responsibility to ensure that where copyright materials are included within an article the permission of the copyright holder has been obtained. Confirmation of this should be included on a separate sheet included with the disk.

Style
Authors are responsible for ensuring that their manuscripts conform to the journal style. The Editors will not undertake retyping of manuscripts before publication.

Spelling
British spelling throughout; NB: -ise ending NOT -ize.

Hyphenation
Generally avoid hyphens (as in "neoliberal"), but use a hyphen when the word following the prefix begins with the same vowel as the one with which the prefix ends, or when the appearance of the compound would be confusing without the hyphen, as in co-editor, co-author, co-operation, co-ordination, pre-empt and neo-institutional.

Punctuation
Use a single (not a double) space after a full point, and after commas, colons, semicolons, etc. Do not put a space in front of a question mark, or in front of any other closing quotation mark.

Initial capitalisation
Please keep capitalisation to a minimum. For instance, only capitalise civil, military, religious and professional titles when preceding the name of a person holding the title. Also, generally do not capitalise references to public office holders, such as "senators", but capitalise the office itself, "the Senate". Capitalise terms such as West and Western, and East and Eastern when used in a cultural sense, but not when used in a geographic sense.

Abbreviations
Do not use fullstops in abbreviations such as MP, MPP, NDP, PQ, USA, OECD. Also, in the initial reference to a relatively unfamiliar institution, the name should be spelled out in full, followed by the abbreviation in brackets used in subsequent references. Latinised terms are not used: use "for example," not "e.g."; "and so forth," rather than "etc."; "that is" rather than "i.e."; "through" or "by way of" rather than "via."

Italics
Italicise titles of books, journals, newspapers. Extensive use of italic for emphasis should be avoided. Do not italicise Latin terms that are generally accepted as English, such as a priori, a posteriori, de facto, de jure and status quo.

Quotations
Use single quotation marks for quoted material within the text; double quotation marks should only be used for quotes within quotes. Do not use leader dots at the beginning or end of a quotation unless the sense absolutely demands. When a quotation is estimated to run five or more typeset lines, it should be offset from the text and end with a bibliographic reference following the fullstop.

Numerals
Spell out one to nine. From 10 up, use numerals. Use 8 per cent rather than eight per cent, eight percent, or 8% except in parenthesis (for example, 8%)

Dates
Write out a series of years in full, for example, 1980-1993 (not 1980-93); refer to a decade without an apostrophe, for example, the 1990s (not the 1990's); for specific dates, cite day month and year in that order, for example, 25 May 2004. References to centuries are written in full: for example, twentieth century (not 20th century).

Endnotes
Explanatory notes should be kept to a minimum and grouped as endnotes, after the text, including any appendices, and before the reference list.

References
References should be cited in the text according to the Harvard reference system, that is, use the last name of the author(s), the date of publication and, following quoted material, the page references. Also note:

  1. Ibid. (and the like) are not used when repeating citations. Simply repeat the original citation verbatim, e.g. (Orwell, 1945).
  2. Multiple citations within parentheses should be divided by a semi-colon, and there should be no use of '&' within such multiple references. References to works published in the same year should be cited as, e.g. (Smith, 1991a, b).
  3. Multiple citations within text should be ordered by date, not alphabetically by author's name, e.g. (Smith, 1902; Jones and Bower, 1934; Brown, 1955, 1958a, b; Green, 1995).
  4. et al. may be used in citations within the text when a paper or book has three or more authors, but note that all names are given in the reference itself.
  5. Page spans in references should be given in full, e.g. Sedgewick (1935: 102-103).

The reference list should include every work cited in the text. Please ensure that dates, spelling and title used in the text are consistent with those listed in the References.

The content and form of the reference list should conform to the examples below. Please note that page numbers are required for articles, both place of publication and publisher are required for books cited and, where relevant, translator and date of first publication should be included. Do not use et al. in the reference list: spell out each author's full name or surname and initials.

Book/multiple author
Archer, K., Gibbins, R., Knopff, R. and Pal, L. (1995) Parameters of Power: Canada's Political Institutions (Scarborough: Nelson).

Article in edited volume
Bennett, C.J. and Bayley, R. (1981) The new public administration of information: Canadian approaches to access and privacy, in: M.W. Westmacott and H.P. Mellon (eds) Public Administration and Policy: Governing in Challenging Times, (Scarborough: Prentice-Hall), pp. 116-127.

Article in journal
Salazar, D.J. and Alper, D.K. (2002) Reconciling environmentalism and the left: perspectives on democracy and social justice in British Columbia's environmental movement. Canadian Journal of Political Science, 35(4), pp. 527-566.

Report, proceedings, unpublished literature
Panayiotis, C.A. (1999) Convergence across Canadian provinces. Discussion paper series, No. 99-03, Department of Economics, University of Calgary.
Nesbitt-Larking, P. (1994) The 1992 referendum and the 1993 federal election in Canada: patterns of protest, in: Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Calgary, Canada, pp. 351-365.
Barr, C.W. (2000) Evaluations of political leaders in Canada, Britain and the United States. Doctoral dissertation, York University, Toronto, Ontario.

Article in newspaper
Smith, A. (1999) Spending limits irk Cabinet. The Globe and Mail, 3 December, p. A1.

An Internet source
Give the universal resource locator in full:
http://info.wlu.ca/~wwwpress/jrls/cjps/english/cjpsstyle.html


Editorial Board

Managing Editors:

Stuart Corbridge - Department of Geography, London School of Economics
Oliver Morrissey - School of Economics, University of Nottingham
Howard White - Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex

Administrative Editor:

Judi Minost ?Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex

Book Reviews Editor:

Jonathan Atkins - The Business School, University of Hull

Editorial Board:

Simon Appleton - University of Nottingham, UK
Simon Batterbury - University of Melbourne, Australia
Jo Beall - London School of Economics, UK
Jere Behrman - University of Pennsylvania, USA
Anne Booth - School of Oriental and African Studies, London, UK
Neera Chandhoke - Department of Political Science, University of Delhi
Christopher Colclough - Centre for Commonwealth Education, Cambridge, UK
Jean Drèze - G.B. Pant Social Science Institute, India
Frank Ellis - University of East Anglia, UK
Peter Evans - University of California, Berkeley, USA
E.V.K. FitzGerald - University of Oxford, UK
Augustin Kwasi Fosu - UN Economic Commission for Africa, Ethiopia
John Harriss - Simon Fraser University, Canada
Barbara Harriss-White - University of Oxford, UK
Christopher Heady - Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, France
Ron Herring - Cornell University, USA
John Hoddinott - International Food Policy Research Institute, USA
Colin Kirkpatrick - Institute for Development Policy and Management, Manchester, UK
Atul Kohli - Princeton University, USA
Robert Lensink - University of Groningen, The Netherlands
Michael Lipton - University of Sussex, UK
Thandika Mkandawire - United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, Switzerland
Chris Milner - School of Economics, University of Nottingham
Mick Moore - Institute of Development Studies, Brighton, UK
David Mosse - School of Oriental and African Studies, UK
Jean-Philippe Platteau - University of Namur, Belgium
Vijayendra Rao - The World Bank, Washington DC, USA
Dr Ken Shadlen - London School of Economics, UK
John Toye - University of Oxford, UK


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