期刊名称:FEMINIST ECONOMICS
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Published By: Routledge
Volume Number: 13
Frequency: 4 issues per year
Print ISSN: 1354-5701
Online ISSN: 1466-4372
2005 Impact Factor: 1.167 Ranking: 35/175 (Economics), 3/27 (Women's Studies) ?Thomson ISI Journal Citation Reports 2006
Feminist Economics is a peer-reviewed journal that provides an open forum for dialogue and debate about feminist economic perspectives. By opening new areas of economic inquiry, welcoming diverse voices, and encouraging critical exchanges, the journal enlarges and enriches economic discourse. The goal of Feminist Economics is not just to develop more illuminating theories, but to improve the conditions of living for all children, women, and men.
Feminist Economics:
- Investigates the relationship between gender and power in the economy and the construction and legitimization of economic knowledge
- Offers feminist insights into the underlying constructs of the economics discipline and into the historical, political, and cultural context of economic knowledge
- Includes cross-disciplinary and cross-country perspectives
The journal also includes short essays, comments and replies to previously published articles, book reviews, and an information section.
Instructions to Authors
All new submissions should follow the instructions below and should be made online at the Feminist Economics Manuscript Central website.
Authors submitting revised manuscripts ?if the first versions were submitted through mail and e-mail ?should not use Manuscript Central but should instead follow the previous instructions. These are available on the Feminist Economics website at www.feministeconomics.org. Please direct any questions about which procedure to use to the journal’s office at feministeconomics@rice.edu.
Further information about the journal including links to the online sample copy and contents pages can be found on the journal homepage.
Manuscript Central Submission Instructions for New Submissions
Please go to the Manuscript Central website at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/rfec and log onto the site. If you are a new user, you will first need to create an account. Submissions should be made via the Author Center.
All manuscripts must conform to Feminist Economics Editorial Policies, and the Style Guidelines listed below. Articles should be written as clearly and as concisely as possible, with the goal of broad accessibility to an audience of economists, scholars in related fields, and feminists concerned with economic issues.
In the interest of anonymous reviewing, the author’s name, contact information, biographical information, and any acknowledgments should not be included anywhere in the main document. Such information and other personal and manuscript details should be given on separate screens where requested (for authors submitting through Manuscript Central) or in separate e-mail attachments (for authors submitting revisions through the e-mail attachment procedure.
FEMINIST ECONOMICS STYLE GUIDELINES
INTRODUCTIONS
We request that authors refrain from ending their introductions with an outline (e.g. Part 1 does A, Part 2 does B, etc.) and instead rely on the logic and organization of the paper to support their arguments.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Any acknowledgments should be entered in the Acknowledgments box on Manuscript Central. Authors submitting revised manuscripts that were not previously handed in through Manuscript Central should submit acknowledgments separately from the main manuscript in a cover letter or a separate e-mail attachment.
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
Please include a biographical note between 40 and 100 words for each author. Authors submitting new manuscripts should enter biographical notes in the appropriate box on Manuscript Central, while authors sending in revised manuscripts under the old system should place their biographical notes in a cover letter or a separate e-mail.
CONTACT INFORMATION
All contact information should be sent separately from the main manuscript. Authors submitting via Manuscript Central will be required to provide the appropriate information before they upload their articles. When turning in revisions to an article previously submitted by post or e-mail attachment, please include full postal and e-mail addresses and all relevant telephone and fax numbers in a cover letter or separate attachment.
ABSTRACT
Please include an abstract of 150 words or less.
KEYWORDS AND JEL CODES
Please include 3? keywords and 1? JEL codes. Details are given on the websites of both the journal (www.feministeconomics.org) and Manuscript Central (http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/rfec).
ILLUSTRATIONS
Tables, figures, and plates should not be inserted within the pages of the manuscript but rather submitted as separate files. Tables should be prepared with the minimum use of horizontal rules (usually three are sufficient) and no vertical rules (if possible). It is important to provide clear copy of the figures (not photocopies or faxes), that can be reproduced easily. Photographs should be high-contrast black and white images.
The desired position in the text for each table, figure, and plate should be clearly indicated in the text of the manuscript, along with an indication of the preferred size of reproduction (e.g. full page, half page). All captions for figures and plates should be listed on a separate sheet. Where photographs or figures are reproduced from an outside source, acknowledgment of source and copyright must be given in the caption.
REFERENCES
Manuscripts must conform to the Author/Date system of citing references, as described in the Chicago Manual of Style (15th ed., University of Chicago Press, 2003). This system uses the name of the author and the date of publication as a key to the full bibliographic details, which are set out in a reference list at the end of the article, e.g. “As Janet Seiz (1993: 190) puts the point?Several authors have noted this trend (Martha Roldan 1982; Cornelia Flora and Blas Santos 1985).?
On the first citation of a work, the first name as well as the surname of the author cited must be given. Thereafter, the surname only with date of publication will suffice. In the case of multiple authors, please list all authors. [Note: et al. is to be used only for four or more authors in subsequent citations.]
Where more than one reference is given at one time in the text, the sources should be listed in chronological order, e.g.”…(see also Nancy Hartsock 1985, 1990; Paula England 1993; Lourdes Benería, Maria Floro, Caren Grown, and Martha MacDonald 2000)?
The date of the publication cited must be the date of the source referred to; when using a republished book, a translation, or modern version of an older edition, the date of the original publication must also be given in the references. Where there are two or more works by one author in the same year, these should be distinguished by using 1980a, 1980b, etc.
The reference list should include every work cited in the text. First names must be given as well as surnames; initials alone are not sufficient. Please ensure that dates, spelling, and titles used in the text are consistent with those in the reference list.
The content and form of the reference list should conform to the following examples. Please note that page numbers are required for articles. Both place of publication and name of publisher should be given for books and, where relevant, translator and date of first publication should be noted. Do not use et al. in the reference list; spell out each author’s full name.
Book Collins, Patricia Hill. 1991. Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness and the Politics of Empowerment. New York and London: Routledge.
Article in edited volume England, Paula. 1993. "The Separative Self: Androcentric Bias in Neoclassical Assumptions," in Marianne A. Ferber and Julie A. Nelson (eds.) Beyond Economic Man: Feminist Theory and Economics, pp. 37-53. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Article in journal/Multiple authors Agarwal, Bina. 1990. "Social Security and the Family: Coping with Seasonality and Calamity in Rural India."Journal of Peasant Studies 17(3): 341-411.
Strober, Myra, Suzanne Gerlach-Downie, and Kenneth Yeager. 1995. "Child Care Centres as Workplaces." Feminist Economics 1 (1): 93-119.
Translated text Foucault, Michel. 1980. Power/Knowledge: Selected Interviews and Other Writings: 1972-1977. Colin Gordon (ed.). Trans. Colin Gordon, Leo Marshall, John Mepham, Kate Soper. Brighton, Sussex: Harvester Press.
Article in newspaper Bennett, Amanda. 1994. "Young Women May Trade Jobs for Marriage." Wall Street Journal, June 29.
Unpublished Badgett, M. V. Lee. 1994. "Civil Rights and Civilized Research," presented at 1994 Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management Research Conference.
INTERNET REFERENCES
If your source of information is a book, a journal, or a journal article that is published and simply reproduced on the Internet, please follow the guidelines above, adding the type of medium (e.g. on-line), how it is available (e.g. HTTP, Gopher, e-mail), and the actual electronic address with the dates of access in parentheses.
Internet source Hymon, Linda Woods. EdWebInformation Problem-Solving Big Six Basics. On-line. Available: http://edweb.solsu.edu/edfirst/bigsix/basics.html (accessed October 1997).
Message on a discussion board Lucas, Linda. (1999) "Work prohibitions," Femecon-L. On-line posting. Available e-mail: listserve@bucknell.edu (accessed 11 March 1999).
Personal e-mail message Smith, B. (1996) "Subject of message." On-line. E-mail: bsmith@org.com (30 July 1996).
NOTES ON STYLE
Spacing: Submissions, including notes and references, should be double-spaced. .
Justification of text: Use the unjustified mode on your word processor. Leave the right margin ragged and avoid word divisions and hyphens at the ends of lines. Only insert hard returns at the end of paragraphs and headings.
Punctuation: Use a single (not a double) space after a full point and after commas, colons, semicolons, etc. Do not put a space in front of a question mark or in front of any other closing quotation mark. Please use serial commas (i.e. before “and,?“or,?etc., in lists).
Spelling: American spelling should be used throughout (analyze, realize, labor, defense).
Initial capitalization: Please keep capitalization to a minimum. Where possible, use lower case for government, church, state, party, volume, etc.; north, south, etc., are only capitalized if used as part of a recognized place name, e.g. Western Australia, South Africa. Use lower case for general terms, e.g. eastern France, southwest of Berlin.
Full points: Use full points after abbreviations (p.m., e.g., i.e., etc.) and abbreviations where the end of the word is omitted (p., ed., ch.). Do not use periods in the case of abbreviations for countries or states (e.g. UK, US, EU and not U.K., U.S., E.U.).
Quotations: Use double quotation marks for quoted material within the text, single quotation marks should only be used for quotes within quotes. Do not use leader dots at the beginning or end of a quotation unless meaning absolutely demands it. For ellipses within a quotation, use three leader dots for a mid-sentence break and four if the break is followed by a new sentence. Quotations over forty words should be extracted and indented with no quotation marks used.
Numerals: In general, spell out numbers under 100; use numerals for measurements (e.g. 12 km) and ages (e.g. 10 years old). Insert a comma for both thousands and tens of thousands, with no space following (e.g. 1,000 and 20,000). Always use the minimum number of figures for ranged numbers and dates (e.g. 22-4, 105-6, 1966-7, 112-13, 1914-18). Use the percentage sign only in figures and tables; spell out “percent?in the text using a numeral for the number (e.g. 84 percent).
Dates: Set out dates as follows: July 8, 1990; on July 8; or on the 8th; 1990s (not spelled out, no apostrophe); nineteenth century (not 19th century), hyphenated when used as an adjective (e.g. nineteenth-century art).
Dashes: Spaced en-rules will be used to indicate dashes. If there is no en-rule on a standard keyboard, use a double hyphen for en dashes (e.g. “the potential for exploitation is still present -- depending on how…”). Use closed double hyphens to link number spans (e.g. 24--8), to connect two items linked in a political context (e.g. “Labour--Liberal alliance,? “Rome--Berlin axis?, and to link the names of joint authors (e.g. Temple--Hardcastle project).
PROOFS
Authors are expected to correct proofs quickly, and any alteration to the original text is strongly discouraged. Authors should correct typesetter’s errors in red; minimal alterations of their own work should be noted in black. Authors may also respond to proof corrections or queries via email.
OFFPRINTS
This journal’s publisher, Taylor & Francis, will send the authors one free copy of the issue in which their articles or reviews appear, together with a pdf or 50 free offprints of their contribution. Book reviewers will receive a pdf or offprints of the entire book review section. (In the case of co-authored articles, offprints must be shared and will be sent to the first named author unless the publisher is otherwise instructed.) Accepted authors will have the opportunity to choose whether they receive a pdf or offprints when they fill out the Feminist Economics Publishing Agreement
IAFFE MEMBERSHIP
Authors whose papers are accepted for publication are encouraged to join the International Association for Feminist Economics (IAFFE).
Editorial Board
Editor:
Diana Strassmann - Rice University, USA
Associate Editors:
Bina Agarwal - Institute of Economic Growth, University of Delhi, India Randy Albelda - University of Massachusetts at Boston, USA Lourdes Benería - Cornell University, USA Barbara R. Bergmann - University of Maryland at College Park and American University, Emerita, USA G?/strong>nseli Berik - University of Utah, USA Rose M. Brewer - University of Minnesota at Twin Cities, USA Cecilia Conrad - Pomona College, USA Carmen Diana Deere - University of Florida, USA Marianne A. Ferber - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Emerita, USA Maria Floro - American University, USA Nancy Folbre - University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA Regenia Gagnier - University of Exeter, UK Susan Himmelweit - Open University, UK Jane Humphries - All Souls College, University of Oxford, UK Joyce P. Jacobsen - Wesleyan University, USA Naila Kabeer - University of Sussex, UK Mary C. King - Portland State University, USA Edith Kuiper - University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Martha McDonald - St. Mary' University, Canada Yana van der Meulen Rodgers - Rutgers University, USA Julie A. Nelson - Tufts University, USA Jill Rubery - University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology, UK Stephanie Seguino - University of Vermont, USA Myra H. Strober - Stanford University, USA Frances Woolley - Carleton University, Canada
Book Review Editor:
Cheryl R. Doss - Yale University, USA
Managing Editor:
Raj Mankad
Assistant Editor:
Mónica Parle
Journal Administrators:
Hank Hancock Cheryl Morehead
Style Editors:
Miah Arnold Lilian Crutchfield Polly Morrice
Staff Assistants:
Eva Chan Wynette Chan
Feminist Economics Fellows:
Anne Dayton Victoria Ford Heba Khan Ayla Samli
Editorial Board:
George Akerlof - University of California at Berkeley, USA Kenneth Arrow - Stanford University, USA Iulie M. Aslaksen - Statistics Norway, Norway M.V. Lee Badgett - University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA Bharati Basu - Central Michigan University, USA William J. Baumol - New York University and Princeton University, USA Francesca Bettio - University of Siena at Piazza, Italy Francine Blau - Cornell University, USA Cristina Carrasco - University of Barcelona, Spain S. Charusheela - University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA Patricia Hill Collins - University of Cincinnati, USA Deborah M. Figart - Richard Stockton College of New Jersey, USA Nancy Fraser - New School University, USA Sakiko Fukuda-Parr - Harvard University, USA Roxane H. Gudeman - Macalaster College, USA Donna Haraway - University of California at Santa Cruz, USA Sandra Harding - University of California at Los Angeles, USA Heidi Hartmann - Institute for Women' Policy Research, USA Nancy Hartsock - University of Washington at Seattle, USA Charlotte Koren - NOVA - Norwegian Social Research, Norway Lena Lavinas - Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Tony Lawson - University of Cambridge, UK Helen E. Longino - Stanford University, USA Ann Mari May - University of Nebraska at Lincoln, USA Gabrielle Meagher - University of Sydney, Australia Martha Nussbaum - University of Chicago, USA Shelley Phipps - Dalhousie University, Canada Antonella Picchio - University of Modena, Italy Robert A. Pollak - Washington University, USA Mozaffar Qizilbash - University of East Anglia, UK Ingrid Robeyns - University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Lisa Saunders - University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA Amartya Sen - Harvard University, USA Jean Shackelford - Bucknell University, USA Agneta Stark - Dalarna University, Sweden Rosalba Todaro - Women' Studies Center, Chile Patricia Williams - Columbia Law School, USA
Former Associate Editors:
Terms of Service
Iulie Aslaksen (1997-2003) M.V. Lee Badgett (1998-2003) Diane Elson (1994-1997) Gillian Hart (1997-1999) Elizabeth Katz (1999-2003) Charlotte Koren (1997-2002) Michele Pujol (1994-1997) Janet Seiz (1994-1997) Rhonda M. Williams (1994-1998)
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