期刊名称:ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT 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
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This journal, firmly positioned at the intersection of economics, environment and development, publishes original papers addressed equally to the research and to the policy communities, and is designed to be accessible to a broad readership. The Editor and Associate Editors are supported by distinguished panels of advisors from around the world, who together ensure that the journal is a major forum for key research conducted in low-income countries as well as elsewhere, and for the work of younger scholars. The journal is divided into two main sections, Theory and Applications and Policy Options. It also includes Book Reviews and Policy Fora. Special issues have included 'The Environmental Kuznets Curve' edited by Ed Barbier, 'Advances in green accounting', guest-edited by Jeff Vincent, and 'Trade and the Environment', edited by Scott Barrett. The latter includes a policy forum focussed on a paper by Jagdish Bhagwati. Forthcoming special issues include 'Agroindustrialisation, international development and the environment' guest-edited by Christopher Barrett, Ed Barbier and Tom Reardon. |
Instructions to Authors
Submission of manuscripts INSTRUCTIONS FOR CONTRIBUTORS 1. Manuscripts should be submitted online via the website http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/ede Instructions can be found at the website by clicking the ‘Instructions and Forms?link (under ‘Resources? and then clicking the ‘Online Submission Instructions for Authors?link. Manuscripts should be written in English. Preferred file formats are Word or pdf files for the text, eps files for the figures, and Excel files for any graphs or charts. 2. General guidelines ?Manuscripts should have a 12 point font, 2.54 cm (1 inch) margins on all sides, and double spacing throughout. The first page of the manuscript should be a title page containing: the name and affiliation of all authors; a designated contact author and his/her complete correspondence address, including email address; and an abstract of not more than 150 words. The text, including footnotes, references and appendices but excluding the title page, should not exceed 8,000 words. Bearing in mind the difficulty in estimating the exact length of a printed article, due to the variations in equations, tables, figures and so forth, the entire manuscript, including tables and figures, should generally not exceed 35 pages (excluding the title page). 3. Tables should be kept short, and numbered sequentially through the text. Tables should be placed at the back of the manuscript, with the appropriate location marked in the text. Titles and column headings should be brief and descriptive. Abbreviations of units of measurement should be added in parentheses. Explanations should be given in notes below the table. The text should include references to all tables. 4. Illustrations should be should be placed, one per page, at the back of the manuscript (or in a separate file), with the appropriate location marked in the text. Quality should be high enough for direct reproduction, and designed to allow a reduction of 50%. Illustrations should be numbered sequentially through the text and each should have a caption. References should be made in the text to each illustration. The journal does not publish colour illustrations. 5. References - Full details of all publications cited in the text should be given in a list of references following the main text. Publications that are not cited in the text should not be included in the references. In the main text refer to the author’s name and year of publication, separated by a comma (Smith, 2003). If there are more than two authors, the name of the first author should be used followed by ‘et al.(Smith et al., 2004). If two or more references are cited together in the text, they should be arranged chronologically (Sorensen, 1997; Goring, 1999). Publications by the same author(s) in the same year should be listed as 1994a, 1994b, etc. Personal communications should be cited as e.g. G. McNeal, personal communication, 2006 )but not included in the list of references.
Use the following style for references: Journal articles: Pearce, D., K. Hamilton, and G. Atkinson (1996), ‘Measuring sustainable development: progress on indicators? Environment and Development Economics 1: 85-101. Articles in edited works: Smith, V.K. and J.V. Krutilla (1982), ‘Toward formulating the role of national resources in economics models? in V.K. Smith and J.V. Krutilla (eds.), Exploration in Natural Resource Economics, Baltimore: John Hopkins Press, pp. 1-43. Books: Maler, K.-G. (1974), Environmental Economics: A Theoretical Inquiry, Baltimore: John Hopkins Press for the Resource for the Future, Inc. Unpublished reports, departmental working papers, etc.: Gren, I.-M. (1992), ‘Benefits from restoring wetlands for nitrogen abatement: a case study of Gotland? Beijer Discussion Paper Series No. 14, The Beijer International Institute of Ecological Economics, Stockholm. Do not abbreviate the titles of periodicals. Titles of publications should not be translated, but those in non-Roman alphabets should be transliterated, and a notation such as ?in Russian)? or ?in Greek, with English abstract)?should be added. 6. Formulae should be clearly written, with the meaning of all symbols explained immediately after the equation in which they are first used. Number equations serially at the right-hand side in parentheses, but only equations referred to in the text need be numbered. Greek letters and mathematical symbols should be italicised. 7. Footnotes should only be used when essential, and kept as short as possible. In most cases they can be incorporated into the normal text. Footnotes should be numbered in superscript in the text, following any punctuation. 8. Copyright - Submission of an article or other item implies that it has not been published or accepted for publication elsewhere. Authors are responsible for obtaining written permission to reproduce any material (in both print and electronic media) for which they do not own copyright, and for ensuring that the appropriate acknowledgements are included in their manuscript. Authors of articles published in the journal assign copyright to Cambridge University Press (with certain rights reserved). 9. The designated author of each accepted article will receive, without charge, one copy of the journal issue in which the paper appears. This author will also be given a pdf file of the published article. Further information can be obtained from the journal's Assistant Editor at: Joan Stefan, Assistant Editor Environment and Development Economics Ag. Gerasimou 34 Glyfada 16675 Greece E-mail: ede@econ.soc.uoc.gr (C) Cambridge University Press (Revised 11/07)
Instructions to Authors 76 ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS.pdf
Editorial Board
Editor
- Anastasios Xepapadeas
- Athens University of Economics and Business
76 Patission Street GR104 34 Athens Greece
- editor@econ.soc.uoc.gr
Assistant Editor
- Joan Stefan
- Athens University of Economics and Business
Ag. Gerasimou 34 Glyfada 16675 Greece
Associate Editors
- Erwin H. Bulte
- Wageningen University, The Netherlands
- Phoebe Koundouri
- Athens University of Economics and Business, Greece
- Margaret Raviro Mabugu
- University of Pretoria, South Africa
- Bernardo Mueller
- University of Brazil, Brazil
- Gerald Shively
- Purdue University, USA
- Eswaran Somanathan
- Indian Statistical Institute, Delhi, India
- Jintao Xu
- Peking University, People's Republic of China
Policy Board
- Kenneth Arrow
- Stanford University, USA
- Edward B. Barbier
- University of Wyoming, USA
- Kanchan Chopra
- University of Delhi Enclave, India
- Partha Dasgupta
- Cambridge University, UK
- Carl Folke
- The Beijer International Institute of Ecological Economics , Sweden
- Gérard Gaudet
- Universit?de Montréal, Canada
- Rashid Hassan
- CEEPA, Centre for Environmental Economics and Policy in Africa, South Africa
- Michael Hoel
- University of Oslo, Norway
- Karl-Göran Mäler
- Beijer Institute, Sweden
- Charles Perrings
- Arizona State University, USA
- Rüdiger Pethig
- University of Siegen, Germany
- Mordechai Schechter
- University of Haifa, Israel
- V. Kerry Smith
- Arizona State University, USA
- Aart de Zeeuw
- Tilburg University, The Netherlands and The Beijer International Institute of Ecological Economics, Sweden
Editorial Board
- Francisco Alpizar
- Tropical Agricultural and Higher Education Center (CATIE),, Costa Rica
- Sangeeta Bansal
- Jawaharlal Nehru University, India
- Lucas Bretschger
- CER-ETH - Center of Economic Research at ETH Zurich, Switzerland
- Robert Cairns
- McGill University, Canada
- Juan-Camilo Cardenas
- Universidad de los Andes, Colombia
- Maria A. Cunha-e-S?
- Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal
- Y. Hossein Farzin
- University of California, Davis, USA
- R. Quentin Grafton
- Australian National University, Australia
- Michael Harris
- University of Sydney, Australia
- Jikun Huang
- Chinese Academy of Sciences, People's Republic of China
- Jane W. Kabubo-Mariara
- University of Nairobi, Kenya
- Matti Liski
- Helsinki School of Economics, Finland
- Ramos Mabugu
- Financial and Fiscal Commission , South Africa
- Katrin Millock
- Paris School of Economics, France
- Juan-Pablo Montero
- Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile
- Keijiro Otsuka
- GRIPS/FASID Joint Graduate Program, Japan
- Unai Pascual
- Cambridge University, United Kingdom
- Eustáquio J. Reis
- IPEA, Brazil
- Eftichios Sartzetakis
- University of Macedonia, Greece
- Robert J. Scholes
- CSIR Natural Resources and the Environment, South Africa
- James Shortle
- Pennsylvania State University , USA
- Priya Shyamsundar
- SANDEE, Thailand
- Jeff Vincent
- Duke University, USA
- Hans-Peter Weikard
- Wageningen University, The Netherlands
- David Zilberman
- University of California, Berkeley, USA
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