期刊名称:JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
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An international quarterly, the Journal of Historical Geography publishes articles on all aspects of historical geography. It aims to interest an international and interdisciplinary readership. In addition to publishing original research papers, the journal encourages discussion of methodology, discourse on items of general interest, and debates on subjects covered in earlier issues. It includes a substantial book review section.
Research Areas Include:
• Historiography of historical geography • Relationships of historical geography with cognate disciplines • Reconstructing the geographies of places in the past • Changing geographies of places in the past • Individual and collective understandings, experiences, and interpretations of places in the past • Past mental and material cultural geographies • Distinctive methodological problems of the historical social sciences • Problems of geographical description • Sources and analytical techniques • Applied historical geography; historical preservation
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Instructions to Authors
All new manuscripts should be submitted through the Journal of Historical Geography online submission and review web site. To submit your paper online, please go to http://ees.elsevier.com/yjhge and upload your article and its associated artwork. A PDF will be generated and the reviewing process will be carried out using that PDF. All correspondence between editor and corresponding author is performed by e-mail, and paper copies are not required at the initial submission stage.
Authors who are unable to provide an electronic version or whose circumstances prevent online submission must contact the journal Editorial Office prior to submission to discuss alternate options, email:jhg@elsevier.com
Papers submitted to the Journal of Historical Geography will normally be evaluated by three referees. Authors and referees will remain anonymous, though some referees may opt to submit 'open' reports. Referees are asked to pay particular attention to the originality of the paper's empirical research, the skill with which the author(s) present and analyse their evidence, and the importance of their research to wider theoretical debate. To be accepted, therefore, a paper must make an original and significant contribution to the general field of historical geography and be properly grounded in the relevant literature.
Contributions are received with the understanding that their contents are original, unpublished material and are not being submitted for publication elsewhere. Translated material, which has not been published in English, will also be considered. The Editors reserve the right to edit or otherwise alter contributions, and authors will receive proofs for approval before publication.
Presentation and Submission
Papers should be set out in the manner of recent numbers of the Journal of Historical Geography. For matters of style, The Oxford Dictionary for Writers and Editors (Oxford University Press, 1981) should be consulted. Spelling can conform either to British usage (following The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary) or to American usage (following Webster's New International Dictionary) though care should be taken to ensure consistency. Single quotation marks should be used throughout the manuscript.
Paper LengthArticles should not exceed 9,000 words or their equivalent (including notes, tables, maps, diagrams and photographs).
Units Measurements should, where possible, be expressed in metric units.
Manuscripts should be arranged in the following order of presentation.
First page: short title, subtitle (if desired), acknowledgements (if any), corresponding author's name, affiliation, E-mail address, full postal address and telephone and fax numbers. Affiliations and addresses of co-authors should be clearly indicated.
Second Page: a self-contained abstract of 150 to 250 words; keywords (up to six); article title abbreviated appropriately for use as a running headline.
Subsequent pages: main body of text, list of references, appendices; tables; footnotes (numbered consecutively).
The text should be organized under appropriate section headings. Section headings should be marked as follows: primary headings should be typed in capitals and underlined; secondary headings should be typed with initial capital letters and underlined; tertiary headings should be typed in lower case and underlined. Any subsequent headings should be preceded by a Roman numeral (I, ii, iii etc.) placed on the first line of text and underlined/ All headings should be placed on the left-hand side of the text.
Notes
Notes should be numbered sequentially through the paper. Authors should consolidate Notes to avoid excessive repetition of the same reference or source. Wherever possible, superscript numbers indicating Notes should appear at the end of sentences, rather than in mid-sentence. The notes themselves should be typed, double-spaced, at the end of the paper under a major subheading.
References Reference should be given in the following form:
Reference to a journal publication: 1. M. Williams, Dark ages and dark areas: global deforestation in the deep past, Journal of Historical Geography 26 (2000) 51-59.
Reference to a book: 2. S. Daniels, Fields of Vision: Landscape Imagery and National Identity in England and the United States, Cambridge, 1992.
Reference to a chapter in an edited book: 3. K. Miyajima, Japanese celestial cartography before the Meiji period, in: J.B. Harley, D. Woodward (Eds), The History of Cartography, Vol. II, Chicago, 1999, 579-603.
For Notes containing more than one citation, references should be separated by a semi-colon.
Citing and listing of web references: full URLs should be cited, alongside any relevant additional information on authors, dates, source material, etc.
Responsibility for the accuracy of bibliographic citations lies entirely with the authors.
Illustrations
All illustrations should be uploaded in camera-ready form, suitable for reproduction (which may include reduction) without retouching. Photographs, charts and diagrams should all be referred to as "Figure(s)" and should be numbered consecutively in the order to which they are referred. They should accompany the manuscript when first submitted via the website, but should not be included within the text.
If authors are unable to upload images they should contact the journal Editorial Office prior to submission to discuss alternate options, email: jhg@elsevier.com.
Line drawings
All lettering, graph lines and points on graphs should be sufficiently large and bold to permit reproduction when the diagram has been reduced to a size suitable for inclusion in the journal. Do not use any type of shading on computer-generated illustrations.
Photographs
Original photographs must be uploaded as they are to be reproduced (e.g. black and white).
Captions
Ensure that each illustration has a caption. Supply captions within a separate uploaded file, not within the figure. A caption should comprise a brief title (not on the figure itself) and a description of the illustration.
Colour Illustrations
Submit colour illustrations as original uploaded photographs close to the size expected in publication. If, together with your accepted article, you submit usable colour figures then Elsevier will ensure, at no additional charge, that these figures will appear in colour on the web (e.g., ScienceDirect and other sites) regardless of whether or not these illustrations are reproduced in colour in the printed version. For colour reproduction in print, you will receive information regarding the costs from Elsevier after receipt of your accepted article.
For further information on the preparation of electronic artwork, please see http://authors.elsevier.com/artwork.
Please note: If the decision is made no to reproduce colour prints in the printed copy of the journal the images will be converted to 'grey scale' for inclusion. Because of technical complications which can arise when converting colour figures to 'grey scale' you may be asked to submit in addition usable black and white prints corresponding to all the colour illustrations.
Tables
Tables should be numbered with Arabic numerals and must be clearly laid out, double-spaced, on separate numbered sheets within the typescript. Explicit reference must be made to each table in the body of the text. All tables must have a short and informative title and, where appropriate, a very short note on the source from which data is derived. Units must be stated for all variables, usually at the head of each column. Horizontal or vertical demarcation lines between columns and rows should be avoided.
Biographical Notes on Authors
When submitting your paper you will be provided with an 'author biography page'. Here authors must supply a short note (no more than 50 words per author) stating their current research interests. There is no need to state professional affiliations or other publications. This page will not be included in the final, published paper.
Copyright
Upon acceptance of an article, authors will be asked to transfer copyright (for more information on copyright seehttp://authors.elsevier.com). This transfer will ensure the widest possible dissemination of information. A letter will be sent to the corresponding author confirming receipt of the manuscript. A form facilitating transfer of copyright will be provided.
If excerpts from other copyrighted works are included, the author(s) must obtain written permission from the copyright owners and credit the source(s) in the article. Elsevier has preprinted forms for use by authors in these cases: contact Elsevier Global Rights and Permissions Department, P.O. Box 800, Oxford, OX5 1DX, UK; phone: (+44) 1865 843830, fax: (+44) 1865 853333, e-mail: permissions@elsevier.com
Proofs
When the manuscript for your accepted article is received, it is considered to be in its final form. Proofs are not to be regarded as 'drafts'.
Proofs will be sent to the author (first-named author if no corresponding author is identified on multi-authored papers) by PDF wherever possible and should be returned within 48 hours of receipt, preferably by email. Corrections should be restricted to typesetting errors; any other amendments may be charged to the author. Any queries should be answered in full. Elsevier will do everything possible to get your article corrected and published as quickly and accurately as possible. Therefore, it is important to ensure that all of your corrections are returned to us in one all-inclusive email or fax. Subsequent additional corrections will not be possible, so please ensure that your first communication is complete.
Offprints
Twenty-five offprints will be supplied to the corresponding author free of charge. Additional offprints can be ordered at a specially reduced rate using the order form sent to the corresponding author after the manuscript has been accepted. Orders for reprints (produced after publication of an article) will incur a 50% surcharge.
Author enquiries
Authors can also keep a track on the progress of their accepted article, and set up e-mail alerts informing them of changes to their manuscript's status, by using the "Track a Paper" feature of Elsevier's Author Gateway.
Full details of electronic submission and formats can be obtained from http://authors.elsevier.com.
Contact details for questions arising after acceptance of an article, especially those relating to proofs, are provided when an article is accepted for publication.
Editorial Board
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Editors: |
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| F. Driver |
Department of Geography, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK
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| D. Robinson |
Department of Geography, Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, College of Arts and Sciences, Syracuse University, New York, USA
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Book Review Editors:
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| L.J. Cameron |
Department of Geography, Queens University, 99 University Drive, Kingston, Ontario, Canada
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| S. Naylor |
School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol, Univesity Road, Bristol, BS8 1SS, UK
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Editorial Board:
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| A. Baker |
University of Cambridge, UK
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| M. Cope |
University of New York at Buffalo, New York, USA
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| S. Courville |
Universite Laval, Canada
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| W.J. Cronon |
University of Wisconsin at Madison, Wisconsin, USA
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| S. Daniels |
University of Nottingham, UK
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| A. Dix |
University of Bonn, Germany
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| W. Doolittle |
University of Texas at Austin, Texas, USA
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| D. Gregory |
University of British Columbia, Canada
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| M. Heffernan |
School of Geography, University of Nottingham, UK
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| K. Jelecek |
Charles University, Czech Republic
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| M. Johns |
University of California at Berkeley, California,USA
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| G. Kearns |
University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
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| A. Kinda |
Kyoto University, Japan
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| D. Livingstone |
Queen's University of Belfast, UK
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| S. Marston |
University of Arizona, USA
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| R.D. Mitchell |
University of Maryland, USA
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| K.M. Morin |
Bucknell University, Pennsylvania, USA
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| E.K. Muller |
University of Pittsburgh, USA
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| H. Nast |
DePaul University, USA
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| S. Parnell |
University of Cape Town, South Africa
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| E.J. Pawson |
University of Canterbury, New Zealand
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| C. Philo |
University of Glasgow, USA
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| J.-R. Pitte |
University of Paris - Sorbonne, France
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| J.M. Powell |
Monash University, Australia
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| H. Prince |
University College London, UK
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| R. Schein |
University of Kentucky, USA
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| C. Withers |
University of Edinburgh, UK
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