期刊名称:JOURNALISM & MASS COMMUNICATION Quarterly

ISSN:1077-6990
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC, 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, USA, CA, 91320
  出版社网址:http://www.aejmc.org/index.html
期刊网址:http://www.aejmc.org/home/publications/jmc-quarterly/
影响因子: 1.159(2015年) 0.797(2014年) 0.354 (2012年) 0.542(2011年)
主题范畴:COMMUNICATION

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



About the journal

Focuses on research in journalism and mass communication. Each issue features reports of original investigation, presenting the latest developments in theory and methodology of communication, international communication, journalism history, and social and legal problems. Also contains book reviews. Refereed. Four times per year. (est. 1924)

标题历史记录详细信息

Former titles (until 1995): Journalism Quarterly (美国) (0196-3031)
(until 1928): The Journalism Bulletin (美国) (0197-2448)
(until 1924): American Association of Teachers of Journalism. Monthly News letter (美国)

Instructions to Authors
Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly strives to be the flagship journal of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication and to be a premier journal in the field. The journal should provide leadership in developing theory and introducing new concepts to its readership. Because communications is a diverse field, articles should address questions using a variety of methods and theoretical perspectives. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly should challenge the boundaries of communication research, guiding its readers to new questions, new evidence, and new conclusions. Articles should be written in a style that is accessible to all communication scholars.

1. Submissions. Submit four typed or computer-processed double-spaced copies of your manuscript. We try to make decisions within three months. Manuscripts should be no longer than 5,000 words.

2. Abstract and author information. An abstract of no more than 100 words should be included in each copy. Author identification should not appear anywhere except on the title page. Include author information: academic or professional title and university and departmental affiliation (if any).

3. Style. For final acceptance, use Chicago Manual of Style (14th. ed.) guidelines. For law manuscripts, Chicago refers you elsewhere for certain citations. Do not use in-text references, i.e., (Weston, 1972). Do not use op. cit., ibid., or loc. cit. In ordinary text, whole numbers from one through ninety-nine are spelled out. However, when normally spelled numbers cluster in a sentence or paragraph, use figures. Use % instead of percent in reference to statistics; for rounded percentages write the word. Underline or italicize names of cities when using newspaper names, i.e., New York Times. In endnotes and in book review headings, use postal code abbreviations for states; in regular copy, use traditional abbreviations.

4. Heading Styles. First-level headings are typed in bold italic and justified left. Second-level headings are indented and typed in bold italic. Third-level headings are indented and typed in italic. Note this example:
Method
Sample. A random sample ...
Sampling Techniques. These techniques are useful when ...

5. Tables. When creating tables, use the WordPerfect table feature, MacIntosh Word using the "Insert Table" command, or PageMaker with tabs. Do not duplicate material in text and tables. Tables and figures should be used only when they substantially aid the reader, not merely because computers make tables easy to create.

6. Disks. If your manuscript is accepted, you will be asked to submit the final copy on a 3 1/2" disk in WordPerfect or Microsoft Word for the IBM/Compatible or in Microsoft Word for the MacIntosh.

Basic Endnote Style:
1. Todd Gitlin, Inside Prime Time (NY: Pantheon, 1985), 82. [Note that page numbers do not carry the pp. or p. prefix.]
2. Joseph R. Dominick, "Children’s Viewing of Crime Shows and Attitudes on Law Enforcement," Journalism Quarterly 51 (spring 1974): 5-12.
3. Robert K. Manoff and Michael Schudson, eds., Reading the News (NY: Pantheon Books, 1986), 8.
4. Leon V. Sigal, "Sources Make the News," in Reading the News, ed. Robert Karl Manoff and Michael Schudson (NY: Pantheon Books, 1986), 9-37.
5. "Nicaragua's Bitter Harvest: War in Coffee Fields," New York Times, 23 December 1983, sec. A, p. 2, col. 4.
6. E.W. Caspari and R.E. Marshak, "The Rise and Fall of Lysenko," Science, 16 July 1965, 275-78.
7. Jean Folkerts, "William Allen White: Press, Power and Party Politics" (Ph.D. diss., University of Kansas, 1981), 182-84.
8. George A. Donohue, Clarice N. Olien, and Phillip J. Tichenor, "Knowledge Gaps and Smoking Behavior" (paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for Public Opinion Research, Lancaster, PA, 1990). [When association is AEJMC, use initials only.]
9. "Currents in the News," U.S. News and World Report, 11 February 1980, 5.

Shortened, or Second References:
1. Gitlin, Inside Prime Time, 2.
2. Dominick, "Children‘s Viewing," 8.
3. Sigal, "Sources Make the News," 22.

Send submissions to Daniel Riffe, Editor, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, E.W. Scripps School of Journalism, Ohio University, Athens, OH 45701, Phone: 740-593-6154 FAX: 740-593-2592, riffe@ohio.edu.


Editorial Board

Dan Riffe, Editor (2008)
Ohio University
Scripps School of Journalism
Athens OH 45701
Tel: (740) 593-2597
Fax: (740) 593-2592
riffe@ohiou.edu

Patricia A. Curtin, Book Review Editor
University of Oregon
School of Journalism and Mass Communication
1275 University of Oregon
Eugene, OR 97403-1275
Tel: (541) 346-3752
Fax: (541) 346-0682
pcurtin@uoregon.edu


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