期刊名称:OCEANIA
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Oceania is a fully refereed journal which is published online and in print versions three times a year, in March, July and November. Oceania publishes contributions in the field of social and cultural anthropology. Its primary regional orientation is to the peoples of Australia, Melanesia, Polynesia, Micronesia and southeast Asia. The central concern of the journal lies with papers that are the product of sustained ethnographic research, but review articles and papers that have direct bearing on the central ethnographic concerns of the journal are also accepted. Correspondence and shorter comments may be published at the discretion of the editor.
Submissions must be original works not previously published and not under consideration of scheduled for publication by another publisher. Manuscripts should generally be 5,000 to 12,000 words including references. However, we also recognize that in an ethnographic journal there is a place for longer papers that are not yet on the scale of a monograph.
Oceania also encourages the submission or thematically connected collections of papers by guest editors. Potential guest editors should consult with the editor on issues of length, style and organization of the collection before submission. In such cases, refereeing will be done as a collection.
Instructions to Authors
1. All manuscripts should be submitted to Oceania, University of Sydney (H42), 116 Darlington Road, NSW 2006 Australia.
2. The editors welcome full-length articles of 5,000 to 12,000 words, and shorter comments on topical issues. Authors who would like to offer review articles should contact the editors. Longer articles will be considered.
3. Articles should be printed in double space on one side of the paper only, with a 4 cm margin on both sides. Please submit a total of 2 copies along with an .rtf. version on CD or floppy disc. Avoid phonetic symbols and underlining where possible. Foreign words should be italicized; use bold for emphasis. Full-length articles should supply an abstract of not more than 200 words. Title pages should include the authors' institutional affiliations.
4. Use in-text referencing in the form (Jones 1974:29; Smith 1980, 1989). Notes should be used as sparingly as possible. Place them at the end of the manuscript and number them consecutively throughout the text. Short quotations (less than 30 words) should be placed in single quotes. Longer quotes should be placed in indented paragraphs without quote marks.
5. Lists of references should be typed alphabetically in accordance with the following style: BERNDT, R. and C. BERNDT. 1974. Card games among the Aborigines of the Northern Territory. Oceania 17: 248-69. 1964. The World of the First Australians. Sydney: Ure Smith LEACH, E. 1983. The Kula: New perspectives on Massim exchange, pp. 529-38. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
6. Tables, maps and illustrations should be on separate pages, numbered and with headings. Indicate where in the text they should appear. Maps and illustrations should be black on white paper, measuring the intended final size ¨C our pages measure 131 x 201 mm. Oceania cannot redraw illustrations and may ask for a production subsidy for elaborate diagrams and maps. Photographs should be glossy black and white prints, preferably 200 x 250 mm. Digital images in TIFF format and minimum 300 dpi resolution at the publishable size are acceptable. Acknowledge the photographer and/or source of any image not your own and please check on copyright issues.
7. All full-length articles within the remit of the journal are submitted to referees, whose comments are passed anonymously to authors. Final responsibility for acceptance rests with the editors. Responsibility for opinions remains with the authors.
8. When articles have been accepted in their final form they should be presented for publication as a Word file in .rtf. format accompanied by one hard copy. KEEP FORMATTING AND USE OF TABS AND SPACES TO A MINIMUM. Authors will not receive proofs for correction, but will be consulted about any substantial changes to the text.
9. The editors reserve the right to shorten correspondence.
Oceania is indexed in APAIS: Australian Public Affairs Information Service produced by the National Library of Australia in both online and printed form, in Anthropological Literature in online and printed form, in Anthropological Index Online (http://rai.anthropology.org.uk/), in Current Contents, International Bibliography of the Social Sciences, Research Alert, Social Sciences Citation Index.
Editorial Board
Editor: Neil Maclean Department of Anthropology, SOPHI A14, University of Sydney [Neil.Maclean@arts.usyd.edu.au]
Review editor: Michael Nihill Department of Anthropology, SOPHI A14, University of Sydney [Michael.Nihill@arts.usyd.edu.au]
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