期刊名称:HUMAN ORGANIZATION

ISSN:0018-7259
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:SOC APPLIED ANTHROPOLOGY, 3000 UNITED FOUNDERS BLVD, STE 148, OKLAHOMA CITY, USA, OK, 73112
  出版社网址:http://www.sfaa.net/
期刊网址:http://www.sfaa.net/ho/
影响因子: 0.814(2015年) 0.437(2014年) 0.75(2013年) 0.487(2012年) 0.557(2011年)
主题范畴:ANTHROPOLOGY;    SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
变更情况:Formerly (until 1949): Applied Anthropology (美国) (0093-2914)

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



About the journal

Human Organization
is the journal of the Society for Applied Anthropology. Its primary objective is the scientific investigation of the principles controlling the relations of human beings to one another and the wide application of these principles to practical problems. The journal regularly includes sections on government and industry, health and medical care, and international affairs. Articles report the application of concepts of social/behavioral science to issues and problems in the contemporary world.

Instructions to Authors

**We now use an electronic submission portal for all manuscripts. Please see below.**

Human Organization publishes articles dealing with all areas of applied social science. Case studies, comparative studies, theoretical essays, and articles describing new methods are welcome.

Authors should keep their manuscripts to fewer than 30 double-spaced typed pages of text (excluding notes, illustrations, and references).

Manuscripts should be typed and electronically formatted to fit on 8.5" x 11" or A4 paper. Double-space all typed matter, including titles, text, quotations, footnotes, legends for illustrations, etc., leaving 1.5" margins on all four sides of the typed page. Footnotes appear as "Notes" at the end of the article. Authors are advised to include footnote material in the text wherever possible. Notes are to be numbered consecutively throughout the paper and are to be typed on a separate sheet (double-spaced). References to literature are not cited in footnotes but are carried within the text in parentheses with authors' last name, the year of the original publication, and page, e.g., (Kroeber 1948:205), or, if author is mentioned in text, merely by date and page, e.g., (1948:205). References cited should be typed (double-spaced) on a separate page. All tables, graphs, diagrams, and illustrative materials should appear on separate pages following the text. Consult The Chicago Manual of Style 15th Edition, The University of Chicago Press (2003) in matters of punctuation and usage.

Guidelines for Preparing and Submitting Manuscripts to Human Organization

These comments will supplement the brief "Information for Authors" found on the inside back cover of every issue of the journal.  No paper is ever rejected solely on the basis of incorrect style, but careful attention to the following points will greatly facilitate the review process and the eventual preparation of an accepted manuscript for publication-and will win you a warm spot in the hearts of the editorial staff.

I. Submission of Manuscripts

  1. Manuscripts submitted to HO must not be under consideration by any other journal, nor can they be scheduled to appear in any published form prior to publication in HO.
  2. Manuscripts should be submitted to www.humanorg.org via our submission portal; those sent to the business office of the Society for Applied Anthropology or to the addresses of former editors will be unnecessarily delayed.
  3. All manuscripts and additional documents should be sent via the submission portal at www.humanorg.org. Other submission formats will only be considered with PRIOR permission from the editors.  Please consult section III for more information regarding electronic submission
  4. Faxed manuscripts will not be accepted.
  5. Manuscripts not accepted for publication will not be returned.

II. Overall Format

  1. The entire manuscript must be double-spaced. No paper will be sent out for review unless it is in double-spaced format. Double-space all material, including quotations, list of references cited, notes captions, and headings.
  2. Leave ample margins on all sides (1.5"). Do not Justify right-hand margins. Use 12 point font; Times/Times Roman is preferred. Do not use underling or bold print; indicate emphasis by using italics.
  3. Format document for use on standard 8.5 x 11" (21.6 x 28 cm.) paper.
  4. The manuscript should contain the following sections:
    1. Title page (includes author's name and address and up to five key words)
    2. Abstract (title only; do not include author's name)
    3. Author's statement (includes author's current affiliation, acknowledgment of research support, etc.)
    4. Text
    5. Notes (keep to an absolute minimum)
    6. References Cited
    7. Figures/maps
    8. Tables

Each of these sections should begin on a new page. Indicate placement of figures and tables in the text, but place the figures and tables separately at the end. Include a separate list of table headings and figure captions.

III. Submission of Electronic Copy-Files, Formats, and Figures

Manuscripts should be submitted electronically via our submission portal at www.humanorg.org as a Microsoft Word document.  Supplemental materials can be uploaded in the supplementary documents section during the submission process Authors are reminded to embed any special fonts or characters such as Arabic fonts etc. Adobe PDF formatted submissions will not be accepted without prior permission from the editors.  Authors may be requested to submit paper copies as needed.

All materials, including tables, maps, kinship diagrams etc, in as much as possible, should be submitted in Microsoft Word format.  For other formats, contact the editors or editorial staff directly at humanorg@mail.ecu.edu.

A 200-word abstract and author's statement (including keywords, present affiliation, and research acknowledgments) must be included for publication with each manuscript.

On the new website you will be asked to comply to/or have the following prepared.

The submission has not been previously published nor is it before another journal for consideration; or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor.

The submission file is in Microsoft Word format.

The text is double-spaced; uses a 12-point font; employs italics, rather than underlining (except with URL addresses); with figures and tables placed at the end.

The text meets this journal's formatting requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines found in About the Journal. Because Human Organization is peer reviewed, all author identification has been removed, and "Author" (typed in bold font in red) and year have been used in the bibliography and footnotes, instead of authors' names, titles, etc. The author's name has been removed from the document's Properties, which in Microsoft Word is found in the File menu.

I have read and understand the copyright notice. I also understand that, by submitting my paper electronically to Human Organization, I agree to all the conditions set forth in the copyright agreement.

I have removed any identifying information (author's names etc.) from the manuscript so that it conforms with the double-blind review policy.

I have included an abstract at the beginning of the manuscript as well as key words.

I will list six potential reviewers for this manuscript in the "Comments to the Editor" section.

It is the policy of Human Organization to review all manuscripts without charge to authors. Furthermore, manuscripts by members of the Society for Applied Anthropology (at least one member in the case of multiple authors) accepted for publication will be published without charge as a benefit of membership. However, non-members of the Society will be required to a pay a $50 nonrefundable publication/membership fee at the time of acceptance and will then receive the publication as a benefit of membership.  All payments should be made via the SfAA website (https://www.sfaa.net/membership/memform.html).  Do not mail payments to the editorial office.

All Authors¡¯ correspondence should be made via email, read receipt requested to: humanorg@mail.ecu.edu.  Supplemental manuscript copies and essential paper correspondence should be addressed to the editorial office:

Editors
David C. Griffith
Jeffrey C. Johnson

Editorial Assistants
Eoghan P. Joyce
William C. Copper 

Human Organization
Editorial Office
East Carolina University
Mamie Jenkins Building
Greenville, NC 27858-4938
252.328.1750
USA

IV. Specific Questions of Style

  1. References are placed in the body of the text. The citation is placed in parenthesis, with the author's name, year of publication, and page cited: (Stedman 1982:1322). Punctuation is placed outside the parenthesis. Specific page citation is mandatory for a direct quote, or when referring to a paraphrased statement that is found only in a very specific place in a cited text. The page may be omitted if the reference is to the general theme of an entire work.
    1. If the citation refers to more than one work, list the works in alphabetical order by the author's name and separate the items by semicolons. For example, (Bolin 1987a, 1987b; Goodell 1985; Nesman 1981).
    1. Works by one, two, or three authors are cited by using the full names, e.g., (Welch, Greathead, and Beutel 1985). But works with four or more authors are cited as e.g., (Acheson et al. 1979). The coauthors' names are given in full in the References Cited list.
  2. References Cited should be alphabetized by author's last name.
    1. Every item referred to in the text must appear in the Reference Cited list. Do not include any item in the References Cited if it has not been cited in the text. Multiple items by the same author are listed chronologically. Multiple items by the same author having the same publication date are alphabetized by the first word of their titles and distinguished by (a), (b), etc.
    1. The layout of typical references is as follows:

Burton, Frank
1978  The Politics of Legitimacy. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.

De Walt, Kathleen M.
1983a  Income and Dietary Adequacy in an Agricultural Community. Social Science and Medicine17:1877-1886.
1983b   Nutritional Strategies and Agricultural Change in a Mexican Community. Ann Arbor, Mich.:  UMI Research Press.

Ellen, R. F., ed.
1984   Ethnographic Research: A Guide to General Conduct. London: Academic Press.

Huamoni Coba, Nanto, and Enqueri Nihua
1992   Huaorani Letter to Maxux President. URL:gopher://forests.org:70/00/educador/stayout.txt (December 23,1996).

LatinoNet
1996   Tras la descertificaci¨®n, Colombia enfrenta una incertidumbre econ¨®mica. URL:http://latina.net.co/economia/archivo/septiembre/certifi.html (September 16,1996).

Nash, June
1976   Ethnology in a Revolutionary Setting. In Ethics & and Anthropology: Dilemmas in Fieldwork. Michael A. Rynkiewich and James P. Spradley, eds. Pp. 148-166. New York: Wiley.

Reynolds, Paul D.
1972   On the Protection of Human Subjects and Social Science. International Social Science Journal 24:693-719.
1979 Ethnical Dilemmas and Social Science Research. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Stuart, James W.
1977   Subsistence Ecology of the Isthmus Nahuat Indians of Southern Veracruz. PhD dissertation, University of California, Riverside.

Please note the patterns of spacing, indentation, capitalization, and punctuation; note also the order in which items of information within a reference are placed. Use a hard return after the author's name. Use a standard tab before and after the date. Double space between all references.

  1. An institution that serves as an author is written out in full, followed by an acronym. The   acronym alone is used in the citation. For example, the full reference is:
    California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) 1986 Statistical Review 1985. Sacramento: State of California. But the citation would be: (CDFA 1986).
  2. Be sure to indicate inclusive pages and volume numbers for articles in periodicals, and   inclusive pages and name of editor for articles in anthologies.
  3. For all other questions regarding style of references-particularly such matters as   government documents, unpublished reports, materials in languages other than English, please consult the Chicago Manual of Style 15th edition, 2003.
  4. Direct quotations of five or more typed lines must be indented from both left and right margins. Do not use quotation marks. Give the reference for such a quotation in the sentence immediately preceding, if at all possible. Omissions in a quotation are indicated by ellipses (three spaced dots); the third dot does not substitute for a period.
  5. The final authority on spelling will be Webster's Third New International Dictionary. In a direct quotation, however, the original spelling is followed, even if it is incorrect. An incorrect spelling is indicated by [sic].
  6. Acronyms do not carry periods. Very familiar acronyms may stand without explanation (e.g., UN, USA, USAID, EEC), but unfamiliar titles are written out in full at first mention, followed by a parenthetical acronym that is used thereafter, e.g., Strawberry Processing Advisory Board (SPAB).
  7. Numbers from one to nine are spelled out; all others are express as numerals, including such constructions as 5,000 (rather than "five thousand"). A number expressing percentage is written as a numeral followed by the word "percent" (e.g., 5 percent, not "5%" or "five percent"). Monetary expressions are to be written as numerals and symbols (e.g. $8,000, not "eight thousand dollars"). Provide U.S. dollar equivalents for all other currencies, if at all possible. Century designations use numerals, and "century" is not capitalized (e.g., "18th century"). A decade is referred to as "the 1980s" (not "the 1980's or "the eighties"). When inclusive pages are cited, no digits are omitted [e.g., (Burton 1978:164-179)], but when a span of years in a single century is indicated, the first two digits of the second number may be omitted (e.g., "1965-80"). If a number begins a sentence, it must be written out.
  8. Common units of measurement are left in abbreviated form; numbers associated with such abbreviations are left as numerals (e.g., 6 km., not "six kilometers"). Use metric units whenever possible.

Editorial Board

Editors

David Griffith and Jeffrey C. Johnson
Human Organization
Editorial Office
East Carolina University
Mamie Jenkins Building
Greenville, NC 27858-4938
252.328.1750
USA
humanorg@mail.ecu.edu


Editorial Board

Susan Abbott-Jamieson
NOAA Fisheries
NMFS-F ST5 SSMC Bldg 3 Rm 1233
1315 E West Hwy
Silver Spring, MD 20910-3282
301-713-2328 x101
Fax 301-713-4137
susan.abbott-jamieson@noaa.gov

Robert Lee Maril
East Carolina University
Sociology A-415 Brewster
Greenville, NC 27858
956-971-0374
Fax 956-381-2343
marilR@mail.ecu.edu

Bonnie J. McCay
Rutgers University-Cook Campus
Human Ecology Cook C
New Brunswick, NJ 08901-8520
732-932-9153 x314
Fax 732-932-6667
mccay@aesop.rutgers.edu

Emilio F. Moran
Indiana University
Student Building 331, 701 E. Kirkwood Ave.
Bloomington, IN 47405-7100
812-855-6181
Fax 812-855-3000
moran@indiana.edu

Gretel Pelto
Cornell University
Div. of Nutritional Science
3M01 MVR Hall
Ithaca, NY 14853
607-272-3262
Fax 607-272-3262
gp32@cornell.edu

Manuel Vald¨¦s Pizzini
University of Puerto Rico
C-2 Las Casonas
Aguada, PR 00602
787-868-4845
Fax 787-892-0373
m_pizzini@hotmail.com

Richard B. Pollnac
University of Rhode Island
Dept. of Sociology
Kingston, RI 02881-0808
401-874-4140
Fax 401-874-2892
rpo4903u@postoffice.uri.edu

Alex Stepick
Florida International University
5300 SW 63rd Ct.
Miami, FL 33155-6450
305-348-2247
Fax 305-348-3605
stepick@fiu.edu

John van Willigen
University of Kentucky
660 Lakeshore Dr.
Lexington, KY 40502-3117
859-269-8301
Fax 859-323-1959
ant101@uky.edu

Susan C. Weller
University of Texas, Galveston
1128 Ewing Hall, Rt. 1153
Galveston, TX 77555-1153
409-772-2551
Fax 409-772-2573
sweller@utmb.edu


Design Editor

Laura Kriegstrom
University of Kansas
Lawrence, KS 66045
lstull@ku.edu


Production Editor

Neil E. Hann
Society for Applied Anthropology
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
neil@hann.org


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