期刊名称:CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS-REVUE CANADIENNE D ECONOMIQUE

ISSN:0008-4085
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:WILEY, 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN, USA, NJ, 07030-5774
  出版社网址:http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/
期刊网址:http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/journal.asp?ref=0008-4085&site=1
影响因子: 0.5(2015年) 0.554(2014年) 0.641(2013年) 0.642 (2012年) 0.61(2011年)
主题范畴: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 Canadian Journal of Economics (CJE) is the primary academic economics journal in Canada. The Journal is interested in publishing papers in all areas of economics, with the exception of very narrow papers addressed to small specialist audiences. The Journal welcomes both theoretical and empirical papers. Most published papers will make use of formal economic models or formal econometrics (or both). However, the Journal will also consider other types of papers (case studies, descriptive essays, construction and reporting of interesting data, etc.) provided they are of extremely high quality. The Journal focuses primarily on original research, but review articles will also be considered.

The CJE seeks to maintain and enhance its position as a major internationally recognized journal and is very receptive to high quality papers on any topic and from any source. In addition, as the Journal of the Canadian Economics Association, the CJE is very interested in high quality empirical papers about the Canadian economy or about Canadian economic issues.

The Journal has existed in its current form since 1968, when it was created by the subdivision of the Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science (CJEPS) into two parts. The CJE and its forerunner, the CJEPS, have published many important papers in economics including, for example, Paul Samuelson's classic 1939 paper on the gains from trade. International trade remains an important field for the Journal, as does labour economics and open-economy macroeconomics. However, this pattern reflects submissions rather than editorial policy, and we encourage researchers in all fields to seriously consider the CJE as an alternative to the leading specialty journals and as a strong contender among the general interest journals.

The CJE is indexed by the Journal of Economic Literature, the Social Science Citation Index, and other standard guides to academic literature.

The Journal is published with the assistance of a grant from the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

标题历史记录详细信息

Supersedes in part (in 1968): Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science (加拿大) (0315-4890)
Which was formerly (until 1935): Contributions to Canada Economics (加拿大) (0383-6258)

Instructions to Authors

The Canadian Journal of Economics publishes papers in all areas of economics, with the exception of very narrow papers addressed to small specialist audiences. Manuscript submissions and all correspondence relating to the contents of the Journal should be sent to the editorial office by e-mail, regular mail, or courier.

Manuscripts may be in English or French and should be submitted through Editorial Express as a PDF file. Upon uploading of the paper, a confirmation email will be sent. The submission is not complete if the confirmation email has not been received. See also: how to create PDF files.

For a first submission, the main text must be double-spaced, and footnotes and references may be single-spaced. Assuming a standard 11 pt. font or typeface and 1" margins, the manuscript should be no longer than 35 pages, including footnotes, references, tables and graphs. Font sizes ranging from 10 pt. to 12 pt. are acceptable. For a first submission, any reasonable typed or computer-printed format meeting these requirements is acceptable, but authors would be wise to consult the Style Guidelines before submission. It would also be a very good idea to read the Advice to Referees.

For papers including empirical work, it is strongly recommended that authors provide an appendix or a link where the data and the procedure to replicate results are described. For papers including experimental work, authors should submit with the paper the experimental design so that referees can judge of the appropriateness of the experiment.

Submission fee

To submit a paper to the Canadian Journal of Economics, at least one of the authors must be a member of the Canadian Economics Association and pay a submission fee as explained below. We kindly request that you pay the submission fee by credit card. The submission fee is $35 CDN for all countries of residence. We accept Visa and Mastercard. To make a payment, please use our online credit card payment system provided by UBC's Sauder School of Business. If you are unable to pay by credit card, please contact the CJE office to make alternative payment arrangements. However, online credit card payments will speed up the processing of your paper submission.

Authors who are current members of the Canadian Economics Association must only pay a submission fee. Authors who are currently not members of the CEA must pay a total fee that includes the submission fee and a one-year subscription to the Journal (which includes membership in the Canadian Economics Association).

Non-members must first pay the $35 CDN submission fee online. Second, join the CEA and subscribe to the CJE. Follow the link to our publisher's web site, and use their online credit card payment form to pay the membership and subscription fee. Processing of your CJE subscription by our publisher usually takes 4-6 weeks, but processing of your paper submission will not be delayed. However, a decision on the submitted paper will be rendered only after the CJE's Editorial Office has received confirmation of your CEA membership from the CJE's publisher.


Refereeing by Authors

One of the problems of the academic world is that many important activities provide relatively little direct compensation. Refereeing is one of those activities. Some successful economists who publish a lot are very irresponsible referees and, conversely, some of the best referees are not necessarily prolific publishers. For the system as a whole to work there must be enough people who referee conscientiously and not too many "free riders". Dealing with this free rider problem is difficult, but one response is that most journals rely heavily on authors of accepted papers to act as referees. This is true of the CJE. Perhaps 50% of refereeing is done by authors of recently accepted manuscripts. Taking account of the fact that the CJE has an acceptance rate of around 25% and that the median paper has two authors and two referees, this implies that an author of an accepted paper would, on average, referee two or three papers for the Journal. This is statistical information only, as there is no formal or contractual linkage between acceptance of a paper and refereeing. However, there is an informal relationship. Basically, if you want to get a paper accepted in the CJE you should expect to do your share of refereeing, and should be willing to do it promptly. Submission of a paper should be treated as an indication of willingness to do some refereeing for the CJE if the paper is accepted for publication.

All other correspondence relating to membership in the Association or subscription to the Journal should be directed to Blackwell Publishers.

Members may subscribe to L'Actualit?Économique - Revue d'Analyse Économique, at $50 for regular members and $25 for students.

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Editorial Board

Managing Editor:

Dwayne Benjamin -- Department of Economics, University of Toronto (dwayne.benjamin@utoronto.ca)

Co-Editors:

Keith Head -- Sauder School of Business, University of British Columbia
Ignatius Horstmann -- Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto (horstman@chass.utoronto.ca)
Angelo Melino -- Department of Economics, University of Toronto (angelo.melino@utoronto.ca)

Editorial Advisors:

Michelle Alexopoulos -- Department of Economics, University of Toronto
Olivier Armantier -- Departément de sciences économiques, Universit?de Montréal
Bruce Blonigen -- Department of Economics, University of Oregon
Martin Boileau -- Department of Economics, University of Colorado
Jean Boivin -- HEC Montréal
Lutz Busch -- Department of Economics, University of Waterloo
Yongmin Chen -- Department of Economics, University of Colorado at Boulder
Katherine Cuff -- Department of Economics, McMaster University
John DiNardo -- Department of Economics, University of Michigan
Nicole Fortin -- Department of Economics, University of British Columbia
Murray Frank -- Carlson School of Management, University of Minnesota
Patrick Gonzalez -- Department of Economics, Universit?Laval
Alain Guay -- Universit?du Québec ?Montréal
Steven Haider -- Department of Economics, Michigan State University
Mike Hoy -- Department of Economics, University of Guelph
Lance Lochner -- Department of Economics, University of Western Ontario
Nicolas Marceau -- Département des sciences économiques, Universit?du Québec ?Montréal
Thierry Mayer -- Centre d'études prospectives et d'informations internationales, Universit?de Paris 1
Kevin Milligan -- Department of Economics, University of British Columbia
Henry Overman -- London School of Economics
Martin Richardson -- Australian National University
John Ries -- Sauder School of Business, University of British Columbia
Joanne Roberts -- Department of Economics, University of Toronto
Thanasis Stengos -- Department of Economics, University of Guelph

Editorial Assistant:

Olivier Lebert -- CIREQ - Universit?de Montréal

Copy-Editor:

Catherine Frost -- Toronto

Technical Advisor & Internet Services:

Werner Antweiler -- Sauder School of Business, University of British Columbia (werner@sauder.ubc.ca)
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