期刊名称:POLITICAL ANALYSIS

ISSN:1047-1987
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, EDINBURGH BLDG, SHAFTESBURY RD, CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND, CB2 8RU
  出版社网址:http://www.oup.co.uk/
期刊网址:http://pan.oxfordjournals.org/
影响因子: 3.491(2015年) 4.655(2014年) 2.879(2013年) 2.231 (2012年) 2.191(2011年)
主题范畴:POLITICAL SCIENCE

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 relatively new field of political methodology is growing exponentially; is improving empirical work in every field of the discipline; and is even making major contributions to empirical and methodological scholarship well outside the diffuse borders of political science. Political Analysis chronicles these exciting developments by publishing the most sophisticated scholarship in the field. It is the place to learn new methods, to find some of the best empirical scholarship, and to publish your best research.'
Prof. Gary King, Dept. of Government, Harvard University

The goal of Political Analysis is to advance the field of political methodology, broadly defined, and articles cover the entire range of interests and problems centering upon how political enquiry can be conducted. In particular, Political Analysis encourages submissions dealing with the logic of inquiry, measurement, estimation and specification, and theory development.

Political Analysis is the only journal dedicated to publishing methodology papers in political science. Required reading for all political scientists who want to be aware of methodological developments, the journal publishes articles of the highest quality, from many of the world's top political scientists.

 


Instructions to Authors

Political Analysis strongly encourages electronic submissions if at all possible. Authors should submit two electronic copies, one with full author identification and one blinded and suitable for referees. Authors should submit in as portable a form as possible, with PDF (Adobe Acrobat) most preferred, but Postscript or Microsoft Word are also acceptable. The e-mail accompanying these submissions should also contain the following:

Author(s) name(s) and address(es)
E-mail address of corresponding author
Title
Abstract

The e-mail should be sent to Political Analysis at politicalanalysis@columbia.edu.
Authors who cannot submit electronically should send four copies by surface mail to:

Robert S. Erikson

Editor, Political Analysis
Political
Science Department
Columbia University
International Affairs Building
, Floor
7
420 West 118th Street

New York, NY 10027
USA

Three of the copies should be suitable for blind refereeing.

The initial submission should be in a format that makes the job of the referee as easy as possible. Footnotes should be at the bottom of the page, and tables and figures may be interspersed in the text. The paper should begin with an abstract that allows readers to quickly grasp the contribution of the article. Abstracts need not adhere to any specific form. All submissions and revisions should have the date on the title page.

All sections should be numbered, with the Introduction being Section 1. While in general only one level of numbering will be needed, as in all cases, section and subsection numbering should be used to clarify argument, not to provide typographical consistency. Articles without sections should not number the introduction.

The only firm rule for initial submissions is that all copies be one-sided. Other than that, authors have an interest in making referees happy, and referees are most happy when they receive easily readable text. (For LaTeX users, a standard LaTeX article style file using the 12pt option is certainly fine.) Tables and figures should be as clear as possible.

After acceptance, the editorial office will communicate with the author about any technical issues that will simplify the copy-editing and typesetting process. These details are irrelevant for the initial submission.

The journal adheres to certain mathematical and notational standards. There is no reason for authors to be concerned with those standards for initial submission, though such concern will make it easier to deal with accepted articles. But initial submissions should strive for mathematical clarity, and a good and consistent notation is an important step toward such clarity. Clarity of the mathematics, tables, and figures is as important a part of the presentation as is verbal clarity.

Authors should not worry about having "too many" equations or "too many" tables. The journal will publish anything that enhances the quality of the final presentation. After acceptance, the editor and author may agree that some tables, figures, or proofs may not be required in the printed article, and may be better placed on the Political Analysis Web site. Such decisions can be postponed until after an article is accepted. It is easy to cut a good article down to its appropriate printed size, whatever that appropriate size may be.

While final details are not critical, there are some important items that it would be helpful to get correct at the start:

This journal uses the Chicago Manual of Style, 15th edition, for citation and reference list details.

Equations should be numbered consecutively, with subnumbering used as appropriate. Equation and other numbering schemes should enhance the clarity of the presentation. All equations must be numbered.

Numbers in the articles and tables should be reported with no more precision than they merit. Careful thought, not computer packages or the need to align tables, should govern how many significant digits are reported. Remember that significant digits are not the same thing as the total number of digits reported. Do not report more significant digits than the standard errors suggest.

Variables should be scaled so as to make the reporting of results as straightforward as possible.

All uncertain numbers should be reported with some indication of how uncertain they are. In general this is best conveyed by confidence intervals or standard errors.

More detail about these, and other, issues may be found below under Final Guidelines.

Notification and Review Process
Authors will be notified of the receipt of an article by e-mail. The editorial office will work hard to get authors an initial decision within three months of submission. If for any reason there is slippage beyond the three months authors will be notified as to when they can expect to hear. In the (hopefully rare) event that the corresponding author has not heard from Political Analysis within three months of submission, please send an e-mail to the Editor,
Robert S. Erikson.

Final Guidelines for Accepted Articles to Political Analysis

Organization of Copy and Electronic Files
After acceptance, authors should send an electronic file that contains their complete manuscript, organized as below, in PDF format. Authors should also provide the "application file" (preferably Word or LaTex; see below) for the manuscript as well as files (preferably EPS or TIFF; see below) for any figures. All files should be identified as authorslastname.doc or .ps or .pdf or .tex or .eps or whatever is appropriate. For multiple-authored articles, use the last name of the first author. Any other required files should use a similar naming structure, e.g., authorslastname.fig1.ps or other appropriate postfix. (Remember, we no longer live in the DOS 8.3 world! Use a naming convention that will minimize errors in the production process.) All copy should be double-spaced (throughout, including endnotes!). Copy should be arranged as

Full title page (page 1)

Abstract

Text

Reference list

Endnotes (no footnotes!)

Figure legends

Tables

Figures

Authors using Microsoft Word or similar files should submit the Word file along with any auxiliary files necessary to produce the figures. (Authors using WordPerfect should save their files as Word files and submit both the Word and WordPerfect files.)

Authors using LaTeX should use pa.sty style file
(http://web.polmeth.ufl.edu/pa/pa.sty), which will help ensure that the paper conforms to PA style (thanks to Jonathan Katz for supplying) as well as: endnotes, setspace, or endfloat.

Authors using LaTeX should remember to supply all non-standard inputs required to produce a Postscript file. Authors should use standard fonts and try to avoid non-standard LaTeX packages.

Special care should be taken with the setting of the math, including such things as bolding vectors and matrices. LaTeX users will find the amssymb and bm packages of use. It would simplify matters if LaTeX authors used a newcommand for vectors, \vm (NOT \vec):
\usepackage{bm}
\newcommand\vm[1]{% Vector or matrix
\bm{\mathrm{#1}}}
(thanks to Donald Arsenau).

Microsoft Word users must take special care to ensure that the mathematical notation conforms to standard.

Formulae and Tables

Equations
Equations and other mathematical forms are an important part of the presentation. As such, the author should strive to make the mathematical presentation as clear as possible. Different subareas use different types of notation; authors should strive to use the clearest notation consistent with their particular subarea. Choice of notation, like choice of word, is the prerogative of the author. As with choices about English sentences, choices about mathematical form should be made so as to clarify the presentation.

Authors of technical works should bear in mind that Political Analysis has a varied readership. Try to avoid formulae and specialized terminology in the introduction. Write crisply but clearly; Political Analysis will provide the space for you to explain any technical results. Good mathematical writing calls for the extra effort involved in revising and reworking the manuscript until it will be clear to most if not all of our readers. For a good test of the "readability" of a paper, the comments of a colleague in another speciality should alert you to problems in comprehension that our heterogeneous group of readers might face.

It should be remembered that equations are part of the text and that equal signs function as verbs. Thus equations should contain appropriate punctuation. All symbols used in equations must be clearly defined.

The author should choose a notation that makes the argument easier to follow. In particular, a consistent notation should be chosen to represent different types of mathematical objects (e.g., matrices, scalars, and vectors). Authors are advised to adhere to the best conventions of notation unless there is a good reason not to do so. (If possible authors should attempt to use a markup language rather than hard coding typesetting specifics. The publisher will handle things like page breaking, white space, etc., and there is no reason for authors to worry about these things. Since we will strive for some consistency of notation, it would be better for authors to use constructs like \vector instead of \overarrow. Authors using LaTeX should use the amsmath package. Attention to these issues can simplify the final typesetting process, but on first submission authors should do whatever will enhance the quality of their article rather than worrying about typesetting issues.

Equations should be numbered consecutively, with subnumbering (e.g., Equations 5a and 5b) used as appropriate. Appendix equations should be labelled A1, etc. Do not number equations by section.

Tables
Numbers in the text of articles and in tables should be reported with no more precision than they are measured and are substantively meaningful. In general, the number of places to the right of the decimal point for a measure should be one more than the number of zeros to the right of the decimal point on the standard error of this measure.

Variables in tables should be rescaled so the entire table (or portion of the table) has a uniform number of digits reported. A table should not have regressions coefficients reported at, say, 77000 in one line and .000046 in another. By appropriate rescaling (e.g., from thousands to millions of dollars, or population in millions per square mile to population in thousands per square mile), it should be possible to provide regression coefficients that are easily comprehensible numbers. The table should clearly note the rescaled units. Rescaled units should be intuitively meaningful, so that, for example, dollar figures would be reported in thousands or millions of dollars. The rescaling of variables should aid, not impede, the clarity of a table.

In most cases, the uncertainty of numerical estimates is better conveyed by confidence intervals or standard errors (or complete likelihood functions or posterior distributions), rather than by hypothesis tests and p-values. However, for those authors who wish to report "statistical significance," statistics with probability levels of less than .001, .01, and .05 may be flagged with 3, 2, and 1 asterisks, respectively, with notes that they are significant at the given levels. Exact probability values may always be given. Political Analysis follows the conventional usage that the unmodified term "significant" implies statistical significance at the 5% level. Authors should not depart from this convention without good reason and without clearly indicating to readers the departure from convention.

It cannot be stressed too much that all articles should strive for maximal clarity. Choices about figures, tables, and mathematics should be made so as to increase clarity. In the end all decisions about clarity must be made by the author (with some help from referees and editors).

Figures
For electronic transmission of papers to the editor and referees, it is necessary that all figures be embedded in the electronic file. This is easily accomplished in Adobe Acrobat or Postscript; those submitting in other formats should make sure that the figures will be seen by the referees. Figures not drawn by computer should be scanned if at all possible. (Scan at the highest resolution possible; it is easy to reduce resolution later.)

The final production process will be greatly simplified if all figures are submitted as Encapsulated Postscript (EPS) or TIFF files. Other electronic formats for figures may work, but at a minimum they increase the possibility of errors at the printing stage.

Authors should also make sure to submit hard copy of any figures suitable for scanning by the printer. While the printer tries to work with figures in electronic files, these do not always work out well.

Citations and References
Authors should consult the Chicago Manual of Style, 15th edition, for references.

Books are referenced as:

Jackman, Simon. 1999. Title. City, State or country: Publisher.

Articles are referenced as:

Author, Alan B., and Charles D. Author. 1999. Title. Journal title 1(2):217-355.

For references with ten authors or fewer, all should be listed; for references with eleven or more, only the first seven should be listed, followed by ¡°et al.¡± (et al. is italicized).

Those who use LaTeX and BibTeX will find that either the harvard or natbib packages will serve them well. Users of harvard should use the apsr option. All users of BibTeX should use the chicago.bst bibliography style. While reference list formatting is only relevant after an article has been accepted, authors can simplify matters by using either the harvard or natbib package and chicago.bst as they begin writing.

Making Data Available for Replication
Political Analysis adheres to a simple replication standard. Unless otherwise noted, appropriate replication materials, including, at a minimum, sufficient data and computer code to allow any reader to reproduce the results of the article, will be permanently posted on the Society's Political Analysis Web site (http://polmeth.wustl.edu/pa/pa_main.html). Authors are also encouraged to post more complete versions of their paper, and other ancillary materials, on that site.

Policy on Submitting Replications and Extensions
Political Analysis now accepts Replication articles for publication on the Political Analysis Web site. Authors interested in submitting such studies should click
here for information on preparing Replications and Extensions.

Author Self-Archiving/Public Access Policy from November 2005
For information about this journal's policy, please visit our
Author Self-Archiving policy page.

Permissions for Illustrations and Figures
Permission to reproduce copyright material, for print and online publication in perpetuity, must be cleared and if necessary paid for by the author; this includes applications and payments to DACS, ARS, and similar licensing agencies where appropriate. Evidence in writing that such permissions have been secured from the rights-holder must be made available to the editors. It is also the author's responsibility to include acknowledgements as stipulated by the particular institutions. Oxford Journals can offer information and documentation to assist authors in securing print and online permissions: please see the
Guidelines for Authors section. Information on permissions contacts for a number of main galleries and museums can also be provided. Should you require copies of this, please contact the editorial office of the journal in question or the Oxford Journals Rights department.

 


Editorial Board

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF:

Robert S. Erikson

Political Science Department
Columbia University
International Affairs Building
, Floor
7
420 West 118th Street

New York, NY 10027
USA

ASSOCIATE EDITORS:

Suzanna De Boef

Pennsylvania State University, USA

Jeff Gill

University of California, Davis, USA

John Londregan

Princeton University, USA

EDITORIAL BOARD:

John Aldrich

Duke University, USA

Larry Bartels

Princeton University, USA

Jonathan Bendor

Stanford University, USA

Joerg Blasius

University of Bonn, Germany

Janet Box-Steffensmeier

Ohio State University, USA

Nancy Burns

University of Michigan, USA

Wendy Tam Cho

Northwestern University, USA

David Collier

University of California, Berkeley, USA

Gary Cox

University of California, San Diego, USA

Tim Feddersen

Northwestern University, USA

Stanley Feldman

SUNY at Stony Brook, USA

David Firth

University of Warwick, UK

Robert Franzese

University of Michigan, USA

Barbara Geddes

University of California, Los Angeles, USA

Elizabeth Gerber

University of Michigan, USA

Donald Green

Yale University, USA

Jacques Hagenaars

University of Tilburg, The Netherlands

Simon Jackman

Stanford University, USA

William Jacoby

Michigan State University, USA

Jonathan Katz

California Institute of Technology, USA

Gary King

Harvard University, USA

George Krause

University of Pittsburgh, USA

Jeffrey Lewis

University of California, Los Angeles, USA

Andrew Martin

Washington University, USA

Walter Mebane

Cornell University, USA

Rebecca Morton

New York University, USA

Jonathan Nagler

New York University, USA

Lawrence Rothenberg

University of Rochester, USA

Willem Saris

University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Phillip Schrodt

University of Kansas, USA

Kenneth Shotts

Stanford University, USA

Alastair Smith

New York University, USA

James Stimson

University of North Carolina, USA

Marc Swyngedouw

University of Leuven and Catholic University of Brussels, Belgium

Eric Tanenbum

University of Essex, UK

Soren Thomsen

University of Aarhus, Denmark

Cees van der Eijk

University of Nottingham, UK

Bruce Western

Princeton University, USA

Christopher Wlezien

Temple University, USA


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