期刊名称:JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
"Journal of Sociology not only publishes theoretical and empirical work at the international cutting edge, but also retains vital a focus on issues more specific to the Australian continent." Rosemary Crompton City University, UK
Journal of Sociology is the official journal of The Australian Sociological Association. It carries peer refereed articles of sociological research and theory on issues of interest to Australian sociology and aims to promote dialogue and exchange between Australian sociologists and the international community of sociology.
Instructions to Authors
Preparation of copy
The Journal of Sociology is a peer-reviewed publication. Articles between 4000-7000 words (double spaced pages) including tables, notes and references, are accepted for review. The Editors reserve the right to return papers to authors where they exceed this word limit. Submission of a manuscript to another journal while under review by the Journal of Sociology is unethical. Breach of this principle will result in the paper being removed from consideration for publication in the JOS. Each manuscript must be accompanied by a signed statement that it has not been published previously and that it has not and will not be sent for consideration by another journal while submitted to the Journal of Sociology.
Prepare copy as follows:
1. Manuscripts should be submitted with the name and affiliation of the author on a separate page to preserve anonymity. Please provide the word count on the manuscript.
2. All manuscripts should be accompanied by an abstract of 100-150 words plus 5 or 6 key words.
3. Footnotes should be numbered serially, typed double-spaced, and should be listed at the end of the article or research report, and should be kept to a minimum.
4. Each table should be typed on a separate page. Insert a guideline, e.g., [Table 1 about here] at the appropriate place in the manuscript. Complex tables can present problems in the conversion from one program to another. Please key tables into the text using one tab only between columns. Do not use spaces between columns. Do not worry about the alignment of columns, but indicate on the printout how the table should appear. Key in a return at the end of a line. Do not tab to wrap.
5. For general style conventions please consult the Style Manual for Authors, Editors and Printers, Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service, 5th Edition (revised) 1998.
6. Please provide a separate brief (no more than 50 words) autobiographical note with your contribution and ensure that a full mailing address and email address is included.
7. Upon acceptance, the final manuscript should be returned with a disk version. The text, tables etc. in the manuscript should be identical. Microsoft Word is the preferred word processing program but note that version 8 is not acceptable. The name of the program and the version used should be noted on the disk.
8. Only 3.5" format disks should be submitted.
9. Figures should be submitted as good quality hard copy as well as electronic versions.
References in the text
All references to books, articles and other sources are to be identified at an appropriate point in the text by name of author, year of publication, and pagination (within parentheses). Footnotes are to be limited to substantive observations only. There is no need for 'ibid', 'loc cit' or 'op cit'. For example:
1. If the author's name is in the text, follow it by the year of publication and a page reference: As Brown (1999: 267) has shown in her case study . . . . If the author's name is not in text, insert at an appropriate point surname, year of publication and page reference, for example: Australian research on changes to the middle class suggests ¡. (Solomon 1998: 135). Note that pagination, author and year are separated by a colon.
2. Where two authors are involved. cite both surnames. Where more than two authors are involved, cite the first surname followed by et al. For institutional authorship, supply only sufficient information for positive identification: The aim of this working paper is to explore the future of sociology in Australia (Department of Sociology, Flinders University, 1997).
3. Separate multiple citations by semicolons: The professions are the subject of considerable sociological attention (e.g., Chagnon 1994; Lorber 1992; Vassiliou 1999).
4. Where there is more than one reference in an article to the same author and year, use letters (a, b, etc.) to distinguish them one from the other. For example: (Roberts 1999a; 1999b).
Format of references
List all items cited in the text alphabetically by author and for each author, by year of publication in an appendix titled References. List all authors by name - do not use et al. or ampersands (&). For example:
Burke, M. (2002) 'Global Boom and Bust Following the World Trade Centre Collapse', Journal of Sociology 38: 135-51.
Shaw, M. J. (2000) Life as a Graduate Student in Australian Universities. London: Sage.
Thompson, M. and J. Smith (1999) 'Gender and Wealth: Beyond the Patterns and the Paradox', pp. 156-87 in J. Montague (ed.) Wealth in Australia: Sociological Concepts and Issues, 2nd edn. Sydney: Prentice Hall.
Contibutions of articles and other material should be sent to: The Editors, Journal of Sociology, PO Box U250, University of New England, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia.
Email: jos@une.edu.au
Editorial Board
Editors: Peter Corrigan University of New England, Australia Kerry Carrington University of New England, Australia Margaret Gibson University of New England, Australia John Scott University of New England, Australia Steve Thiele University of New England, Australia
Editorial Board:
Book Review Editors Gail Hawkes University of New England, Australia David Gray University of New England, Australia Managing Editor Vicki Weaver University of New England, Australia Editorial Advisory Board Loretta Baldassar University of Western Australia, Australia Michael Bittman University of New England, Australia Dorothy Broom Australian National University, Australia John Carroll Massachusetts Institute of Technology Raewyn Connell University of Sydney John Germov University of Newcastle, Australia Daphne Habibis University of Tasmania, Australia Roberta Julian University of Tasmania, Australia Geoff Lawrence Central Queensland University, Australia Eric Livingstone University of New England, Australia Deborah Lupton Charles Sturt University, Australia Victor Minichiello University of New England, Australia Michael Pusey University of New South Wales, Australia Jennifer Rindfleish University of New England, Australia Sharyn Roach Anleu Flinders University of South Australia, Australia Evan Willis La Trobe University, Australia Ian Woodward Griffith University, Australia International Editorial Board Peter Aggleton Institute of Education, University of London, UK Maureen Baker University of Auckland, New Zealand Andy Bennett Brock University, Canada Pat Carlen University of Keele, UK Myra Marx Ferree University of Connecticut Health Center Mary Margaret Fonow Arizona State University, USA Paul du Gay The Open University, UK John Holmwood University of Sussex, UK Robert Holton Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland Susan McDaniel University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada Victoria Pitts Queens College, USA Nii-K Plange UN Development Programme, Papua New Guinea David Plummer University of the West Indies Judith Stacey New York University, USA Bryan Turner National University of Singapore, Singapore
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