期刊名称:STUDIES IN COMPARATIVE INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal Studies in Comparative International Development (SCID) is an interdisciplinary journal, which addresses issues concerning political, social, economic, and environmental change in local, national, and international contexts. Among its major emphases are political and state institutions; the effects of a changing international economy; political-economic models of growth and distribution; and the transformation of social structure and culture.
The journal has a tradition of presenting critical and innovative analytical perspectives that challenge prevailing orthodoxies. It publishes original research articles on all world regions and is open to all theoretical and methodical approaches.
In addition to research articles, SCID occasionally publishes reviews that summarize and assess significant, thematically linked bodies of literature and methodological essays that evaluate and/or make an original contribution to the debates about the conduct of social science research.
For More Information Check Out SCID's Website
Instructions to Authors
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GENERAL REQUIREMENTS Manuscript submissions should be sent in both hardcopy (3 copies, 2-sided encouraged) and electronic form (disk or e-mail attachment). Research articles and contributions to the Research Forum should be submitted to: SCID, Watson Institute, Brown University, 111 Thayer Street, Box 1970, Providence, RI 02912-1970 and scid@brown.edu 1. Authors should put name, address, phone, fax, and e-mail address on a separate cover sheet and remove identifying information from the title page and body of the manuscript. They should also include an abstract of no more than 200 words and a brief biographical statement. Authors should not submit articles that have been previously published or that are under review for publication elsewhere. Manuscripts should not exceed 10,000 words in length, including notes and references.
2. Include the article and all tables and figures in the same electronic file, if possible. You may either insert tables and figures into the body of the article or include them at the end, with indications in the body of article for where they should be placed (e.g., INSERT FIGURE 1 HERE).
3. If included, acknowledgements should be indicated by an asterisk at the end of the article title, and should be placed at the beginning of the endnotes.
4. American rather than British spellings should be used (e.g., labor vs. labour; while vs. whilst; democratization vs. democratisation; center vs. centre).
- If foreign spellings appear as part of quoted material or titles, leave as is.
- Single quotation marks should be used only when a quotation appears within another quotation.
- It may be helpful to run a spell check using the American dictionary in MS Word.
SOURCES Sources should be identified using the author-date style described in The Chicago Manual of Style, 15th Edition. Citations should appear in the text, with full documentation in a list of references at the end of the article. Endnotes should be used rather than footnotes, and only when referring to substantive issues. In the final edit of your article, check that all in-text citations (including sources for tables and figures) correspond to sources listed in the references; after the revision process, changes in the text may not be reflected in the final reference list.
The following briefly outlines the SCID style for acknowledging sources.
1. The basic form of the author-date citation in running text or at the end of a block quote consists of the author's last name, the year of publication of the work, and any pages specifically cited.
(Amsden 2001: 8) (Collins and Wortmaster 1953: 50-82)
(Whipsmith 1988: 34; Ohmstead 1990: 28) (Aoki, Murdock, and Okuno-Fujiwara 1996)
(Stern et al. 1995) (Kang 2002a, 2002b)
- When listing page numbers, remember to insert a space between the colon and page number.
2. Reference list entries providing complete information for the author-date citations given above should appear as follows.
Book
Kymlicka, Will. 1989. Liberalism, Community and Culture. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
. 1995. Multicultural Citizenship. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- For multiple works by the same author, replace the author's name with a three-em dash, as shown above.
Edited Volume
Hirst, Paul and Sunil Khilnani, eds. 1996. Reinventing Democracy. Oxford, UK: Blackwell.
Chapter in an edited volume
Macdonald, Dwight. 1970. "Introduction." Pp. 11-14 in The Tales of Hoffman, eds. M. Levine, G. McNamee, and D. Greenberg. New York: Bantam Books.
- Remember to include page numbers, unless the article or book has not yet been published.
- Last name and initial of first name of editor(s) is sufficient.
Article in a journal
Molotch, Harvey. 1976. "The City as a Growth Machine." American Journal of Sociology 82 (September): 50-65.
3. Quoted material and references in a foreign language should follow the conventions of that language. For example, Spanish and French titles use sentence case rather than the English convention of title case.
Inter-American Development Bank. 1994. "La descentralizacion fiscal en America Latina, problemas y perspectivas: el caso de Argentina." Washington, D.C.: IDB Working Paper 184.
4. Interviews and personal communications conducted by the author should be cited in the text with the last name of the interviewee and year of interview. Full information should appear in the references.
Greger, Petr. 1996. Interview by the author, Delegation of the European Commission, Prague, 25 November.
5. Internet sources should follow guidelines described by International Standard, available at:
For more information contact: SCID@brown.edu
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Editorial Board
EDITOR Barbara Stallings, Brown University
MANAGING EDITOR Frederick Fullerton, Brown University
EDITORIAL ASSOCIATES Daniel Schensul Matthias vom Hau
EDITORIAL BOARD Arun Agrawal, Yale University Fred Block, University of California, Davis Kenneth A. Bollen, University of North Carolina B¨¦la Greskovits, Central European University Herbert Kitschelt, Duke University Atul Kohli, Princeton University Mark Lichbach , University of California, Riverside Ian S. Lustick, University of Pennsylvania Elizabeth J. Perry, Harvard University Alejandro Portes, Princeton University Dani Rodrik, Harvard University Gay W. Seidman, University of Wisconsin, Madison Barbara Stallings, UN ECLAC David Stark, Columbia University Alfred Stepan, Columbia University Michael Storper, University of California, Los Angeles Ivan Szelenyi, Yale University Robert Hunter Wade, London School of Economics
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