期刊名称:PSYCHOLOGY PUBLIC POLICY AND LAW

ISSN:1076-8971
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC, 750 FIRST ST NE, WASHINGTON, USA, DC, 20002-4242
  出版社网址:http://www.apa.org/
期刊网址:http://www.apa.org/journals/law.html
影响因子: 1.986(2015年) 1.469(2014年) 1.723(2013年) 2.711 (2012年) 1.933(2011年)
主题范畴:HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES;    LAW;    PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY

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



About the journal

Psychology, Public Policy, and Law focuses on the links between psychology as a science and public policy and law. It publishes articles that (a) critically evaluate the contributions and potential contributions of psychology and relevant information derived from related disciplines (hereinafter psychology) to public policy and legal issues (e.g., linking knowledge on risk assessment to global climate change and energy policy and law; analyzing the fit between FDA policies on food labeling and research on comprehension); (b) assess the desirability of different public policy and legal alternatives in light of the scientific knowledge base in psychology (e.g., family leave policies and law considered against a background of knowledge about socialization in dual-career families; retirement policies and law in light of health, life cycle, and aging); (c) articulate research needs that address public policy and legal issues for which there is currently insufficient theoretical and empirical knowledge or publish the results of large-scale empirical work addressed to such concerns; (d) examine public policy and legal issues relating to the conduct of psychology and related disciplines (e.g., human subjects, protection policies; informed consent procedures). Although some of these issues may be addressed in articles currently being submitted to traditional law reviews, this publication uniquely provides peer review, scientific and legal input, and editorial guidance from psychologists and lawyers. Through publication in a single forum, it will also focus attention of scholarly, public policy, and legal audiences on such work. This journal does not routinely serve as an outlet for primary reports of empirical research; however, the journal does publish original primary empirical data. Empirical research that is published in Psychology, Public Policy, and Law must make a significant contribution to public policy or the law. Such empirical work is typically multistudy, multijurisdictional, longitudinal, or in some other way extremely broad in scope, of major national significance, or both.

 


Instructions to Authors

Effective in January 2006, the Incoming Editor is receiving all new submissions to the journal. Submissions that are accepted will be published beginning in the 2007 volume.

Authors should submit manuscripts electronically.

For general correspondence, authors may write to the Incoming Editor:

eval(unescape('%76%61%72%20%73%3D%27%61%6D%6C%69%6F%74%73%3A%65%70%72%6E%64%6F%6A%40%61%6A%2E%79%75%63%79%6E%65%2E%75%64%27%3B%76%61%72%20%7A%3D%27%27%3B%66%6F%72%28%76%61%72%20%69%3D%30%3B%69%3C%73%2E%6C%65%6E%67%74%68%3B%69%2B%2B%2C%69%2B%2B%29%7B%7A%3D%7A%2B%73%2E%73%75%62%73%74%72%69%6E%67%28%69%2B%31%2C%69%2B%32%29%2B%73%2E%73%75%62%73%74%72%69%6E%67%28%69%2C%69%2B%31%29%7D%64%6F%63%75%6D%65%6E%74%2E%77%72%69%74%65%28%27%3C%61%20%68%72%65%66%3D%22%27%2B%7A%2B%27%22%3E%27%29%3B')) Steven Penrod, PhD
John Jay College of Criminal Justice
445 West 59th Street N2131
New York, NY 10019-1199

IMPORTANT: If you submitted your manuscript prior to January 1, 2006, to outgoing editor Jane Goodman-Delahunty and are responding to the editor's request to submit a revision of that manuscript, please use this Manuscript Submission Portal.

The journal encourages authors to write comprehensive pieces, rather than submitting smaller pieces to multiple journals.

In addition to addresses and phone numbers, authors should supply e-mail addresses and fax numbers if available, for potential use by the editorial office and later by the production office. Authors should keep a copy of the manuscript to guard against loss.

Publication Policies

APA policy prohibits an author from submitting the same manuscript for concurrent consideration by two or more publications or from publishing any manuscript that has already been published in whole or substantial part elsewhere.

APA's policy regarding posting articles on the Internet may be found at Posting Articles on the Internet.

Permissions

Authors are required to obtain and provide to the editor on final acceptance all necessary permissions to reproduce in print and electronic form any copyrighted work, including, for example, test materials (or portions thereof) and photographs of people.

Masked Review Policy

This journal has adopted a policy of masked review for all submissions. Each copy of the manuscript must include a separate title page with the authors' names and affiliations, and these should not appear anywhere else in the manuscript. Footnotes that identify the authors must be typed on a separate page. Authors must make every effort to see that the manuscript itself contains no clues to their identities.

Format

Manuscripts may be prepared in accordance with either the psychological (Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 5th ed.) or legal (The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation, 17th ed.) style manuals. All manuscripts are subject to editing for bias-free language. All copy must be double-spaced. See APA's Checklist for Manuscript Submission.

Abstract and keywords. All manuscripts must include an abstract of 120¨C185 words typed double-spaced on a separate sheet of paper. After the abstract, please supply up to five keywords or brief phrases. For manuscripts prepared according to Bluebook style, footnotes must also be double-spaced and listed as endnotes after the main text (they will be typeset for publication as footnotes).

References. References should be listed in alphabetical order. Each listed reference should be cited in text, and each text citation should be listed in the References.

Supplemental Materials

APA can now place supplementary materials online, which will be available via the journal’s Web page as noted above. To submit such materials, please see Supplementing Your Article With Online Material for details.

Empirical Studies

In the case of articles that are based on empirical data, APA policy prohibits an author from publishing "as original data, data that have been previously published" (APA Ethical Principles Standard 8.13). Authors have an obligation to consult journal editors about prior publication of any data on which their article depends. In addition, authors agree "after research results are published, . . . not [to] withhold the data on which their conclusions are based from other competent professionals who seek to verify the substantive claims through reanalysis and who intend to use such data only for that purpose, provided that the confidentiality of the participants can be protected and unless legal rights concerning proprietary data preclude their release" (APA Ethical Principles Standard 8.14). Authors are expected to have their data available throughout the editorial review process and for at least 5 years after the date of publication.

Authors will be required to certify in writing that they have complied with APA ethical standards in the treatment of their sample, human or animal, or to describe the details of treatment. A copy of the APA Ethical Principles may be obtained from the APA Ethics Office web site or by writing the APA Ethics Office, 750 First Street, NE, Washington, DC 20002-4242.

APA requires authors to reveal any possible conflict of interest in the conduct and reporting of research (e.g., financial interests in a test or procedure, funding by pharmaceutical companies for drug research).

Authors of accepted manuscripts will be required to transfer copyright to APA.

Preparing Files for Production

If your manuscript is accepted for publication, please follow the guidelines for file formats and naming provided at Preparing Your Accepted Manuscript for Production. If your manuscript was mask reviewed, please ensure that the final version for production includes a byline and full author note for typesetting.

 


Editorial Board

Editor

Jane Goodman-Delahunty
School of Psychology,
University of New South Wales

Legal Advisor

Bruce J. Winick
University of Miami School of Law

Consulting Editors

Ronald J. Allen
Northwestern University School of Law

David C. Baldus
University of Iowa College of Law

Connie J. A. Beck
Program in Psychology, Policy and Law, University of Arizona

Donald N. Bersoff
School of Law, Villanova University, and Department of Psychology, Hahnemann University

Richard J. Bonnie
University of Virginia School of Law

Stanley L. Brodsky
Department of Psychology, University of Alabama

Laura S. Brown
Independent Practice, Seattle, Washington

Maggie Bruck
Department of Psychiatry and Behavior Sciences, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutes

John M. Darley
Psychology Department, University of Princeton

Shari Seidman Diamond
Northwestern University School of Law and American Bar Foundation

David L. Faigman
University of California Hastings College of the Law

Norman J. Finkel
Department of Psychology, Georgetown University

Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela
Department of Psychology, University of Cape Town

Edith Greene
Department of Psychology, University of Colorado

Barbara A. Gutek
Department of Management and Policy, University of Arizona

Craig W. Haney
Psychology Department, University of California, Santa Cruz

Valerie P. Hans
Department of Criminal Justice, University of Delaware

Deborah R. Hensler
Stanford Law School and RAND Institute for Civil Justice

Dorothy Kagehiro
FTI Consulting, Washington, DC

Margaret Bull Kovera
John Jay College
of Criminal Justice

Daniel Krauss
Department of Psychology, Claremont McKenna College

Roger J. R. Levesque
Department of Criminal Justice, Indiana University

Joel D. Lieberman
Department of Criminal Justice, University of Nevada

Carrie J. Menkel-Meadow
Georgetown University Law Center

Terrie Moffitt
Department of Psychology, University of WisconsinMadison, and Institute of Psychiatry, London

Jean Montoya
University of San Diego School of Law

Maureen O'Connor
John Jay College of Criminal Justice

James R. P. Ogloff
School of Psychology, Psychiatry and Psychological Medicine, Monash University, and Forensicare

Michael Perlin
New York Law School

Jeffrey J. Rachlinski
Cornell University Law School

Marnie Rice
Penetanguishene Mental Health Center

Efren Rivera-Ramos
University of Puerto Rico School of Law

Jennifer K. Robbennolt
University of Missouri School of Law

Paul H. Robinson
Northwestern University Law School

Robert F. Schopp
University of Nebraska College of Law

Regina Schuller
Department of Psychology, York University

Vicki Schultz
Yale University Law School

Daniel W. Shuman
Southern Methodist University School of Law

Christopher Slobogin
University of Florida Levin College of Law

Susan Stefan
Center for Public Representation, Massachusetts

Christina A. Studebaker
The Chicago School of Professional Psychology

Neil Vidmar
Duke University Law School

Gary L. Wells
Department of Psychology, Iowa State University

Stephen Wong
Regional Psychiatric Centre, Saskatoon

Special Assistants to the Editor

Deborah Bradford
Christopher M. Shanahan
Charmaine S. Silove

Student Editorial Board, University of Miami School of Law

Julie Hill, Editor in Chief
David Hill, Executive Editor
Derek Weisbruch, Managing Editor

Senior Editors

Abbey Akin
Robyn Benkendorf
Aaron Brandel
Tehaura Henning
Jenn Pantel
William Pardue
Jamie Rich
Anne Rose
Nicole Wiseberg


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