期刊名称:JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIAN STUDIES

ISSN:1444-3058
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON, ENGLAND, OXON, OX14 4RN
  出版社网址:http://www.tandfonline.com/
期刊网址:http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjau20/current#.UrALJmzxuM8
影响因子: 0.117(2015年) 0.288(2014年) 0.121(2013年) 0.148 (2012年)
主题范畴:CULTURAL STUDIES;    HISTORY;    AREA STUDIES

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 Australian Studies

The Journal of Australian Studies (JAS) is the journal of the International Australian Studies Association (InASA). In print since the mid-1970s, in the last few decades JAS has been involved in some of the most important discussions about the past, present and future of Australia. The Journal of Australian Studies is a fully refereed, international quarterly journal which publishes scholarly articles and reviews on Australian culture, society, politics, history and literature. The editorial practice is to promote and include multi- and interdisciplinary work.  JAS has been assigned a multidisciplinary FoR code in the most ARC's 2012 journal list. It has also been assigned a multidisciplinary code in the 2012 ERA exercise.  

Subjects covered by this journal

 

Journal of Australian Studies is currently noted in:

A P A I S: Australian Public Affairs Information Service (Online Edition), Book Review Index, C S A Worldwide Political Science Abstracts (Cambridge Scientific Abstracts), EBSCOhost, Education Research Index, Humanities International Index, International Bibliography of the Social Sciences, Periodicals Index Online, SCOPUS, Sociological Abstracts and Swets Information Services.


Instructions to Authors
This journal uses ScholarOne Manuscripts (previously Manuscript Central) to peer review manuscript submissions. Please read the guide for ScholarOne authors before making a submission. Complete guidelines for preparing and submitting your manuscript to this journal are provided below.

STYLE GUIDE

Proposals for the 2015 guest-edited special issue, including a full list of abstracts, must be submitted to the editors by March 30 2013. Proposals for themed sections of general issues are always welcome.

Articles should have a word length of between 6000 and 8000 words, including endnotes.
 
JAS’s referencing style is based on Chicago style. Please refer to the complete Chicago style guide (16th edition) where style issues are not covered by the following:

Endnotes:
Endnotes containing bibliographic references are the preferred format. Always check your endnotes against the manuscript.

When citing a work the following format is used: Author name (with first name before last name), full title of work (including any subtitle), place of publication (only the first named city is usually included), publisher, date, page numbers. If the book is other than the first edition the number of the edition follows the title in the listing (2nd ed.).

When a work is published in book form the title should be in italics. Where an article appears in an edited book or journal double inverted commas around the article title are used with the book or journal title in italics. Use maximal capitalisation for the major words in book, journal and article/chapter titles.

A book:
Gail Reekie, Measuring Immorality: Social Inquiry and the Problems of Illegitimacy (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), 64-67. (note there is no comma after the book title).

For subsequent endnotes please use a shortened form: Reekie, Measuring Immortality, 64.

An edited book:
Graeme Turner, ed., The Film Cultures Reader (London: Routledge, 2002), 4.
In the shortened form ed. is not used: Turner, Film Culture Reader, 4.

A chapter in an edited book:
Ania Walwicz, “Look at Me, Ma - I'm Going to be a Marginal Writer,” in The Space Between: Australian Women Writing Fictocriticism, ed. Heather Kerr and Amanda Nettlebeck, (Nedlands: University of Western Australian Press, 1998), 274. (note that the title of the book should be preceded by in)

Walwicz, “Look at Me, Ma,” 274.

An article in a journal:
For an article in a journal with a volume and issue number:
Prudence Ahrens, “Darkness to Light: Images of the Converted in Reverend George Brown’s Photographs,” Continuum 19.2 (2005): 279-84. (No comma after the journal title).

For an article in a journal with only an issue number:
James Jupp, “An Anxious Nation Fears the Worst,” Journal of Australian Studies 55 (1997): 4.

For an article in an on-line journal follow the above and include a URL, or, if available, a DOI. The DOI or URL follows the page numbers. An access date is not necessary:
Julie Kimber, “‘A Nuisance to the Community’: Policing the Vagrant Woman,” Journal of Australian Studies 34.3 (2010): 275-77, doi:10.1080/14443058.2010.498092.

When providing the volume and issue number arabic numbers are used even if the journal itself uses roman numerals.
When an issue number is provided it is not necessary to include the month or season though it is never incorrect to include it.

Newspapers:
Christopher Kremmer, “Generation V,” Sydney Morning Herald, April 30, 2005, 6.

 Sydney Morning Herald, June 30, 1998, 7.

If the newspaper was obtained online include the URL:
Rachel Olding, “High Five: Top Restaurants Cook Up a Storm,” Sydney Morning Herald, September 5, 2011, http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/restaurants-and-bars/high-five-top-restaurants-cook-up-a-storm-20110905-1jttt.html

Note an initial The is omitted from newspaper titles.

A thesis:
Titles of unpublished works appear in quotation marks rather than italics.
Masayo Tada, “Representations of Australia in a Japanese National Newspaper: 1970s — 1990s” (MA thesis, University of Queensland, 1998), 53.

Paper presented at a meeting or conference:
Chris Brennan-Horley, “Work and Play: the Vagaries Surrounding Contemporary Cultural Production in Sydney’s Dance Music Culture” (paper presented at the Institute of Australian Geographers Conference, University of Melbourne, July 4, 2007).

Official publications:
New South Wales Parliamentary Papers, (NSWPP), Report on Technical Education, vol 1, second session, 1938-40, 1937, 25.

Victorian Parliamentary Debates, (VPD), vol 183, Legislative Assembly, 1930, 2748.

Constitution Amendment Act (Victoria), 1958.

Book published electronically:
Bruno David, Bryce Barker and Ian J. McNiven, Social Archaeology of Australian Indigenous Societies (Canberra: Aboriginal Studies Press, 2006), accessed October 20, 2010, http://search.informit.com.au/documentSummary;dn=340537164328884;res=IELHSS.

Website content:
For material on a website include the title or description of the page, the author of the content (if any), the owner of the site, and a URL. Include a publication date or date of revision; if no such date can be determined include an access date.

“The Australia-India Council,” Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, accessed October 10, 2010, http://www.dfat.gov.au/aic/.

Subsequent references to a work already cited:
Please do not use ibid. or op. cit. Instead, for all consecutive or subsequent references, please use the author's surname, a short tile, and the page number:
Reekie, Measuring Immorality, 109.

Style and usage

Use of Capitals:
Capitals are used for proper names, but are otherwise employed as sparingly as possible. When in doubt use lower case.

Personal prefixes and titles:
No capital initial is used for official ranks or titles unless combined with the name of the holder and is used as part of the name:

the duke; the general; the minister; the prime minister, the assistant commissioner; But Duke of Argyll; General Paul Brown; Prime Minister Gillard.

However, when a title is used in apposition before a personal name (not alone and  as part of a name but as an equivalent to it), it is not seen as a title and is therefore lower-cased eg. Julia Gillard, prime minister of Australia; John Reeves, vice-chancellor of Canberra University.

Titles of institutions, organisations, groups, etc:
No capital is used unless the full title is being given: the society; the ministry; the council; the commission; the government; But the National Trust; the House of Representatives; Australian Parliament (when referring to a specific parliament).

Historical periods of time, eras, events, etc:
No capital initial unless it is considered part of a proper name: in post-industrial Australia, ... on the home front ... the twenty-first century

Spelling :
The Macquarie Dictionary should be followed. NB realise, liberalise, fossilise, etc. — 's' not 'z'.

Abbreviations and acronyms:
Titles, Qualifications, Initials, etc:
All abbreviations and acronyms for proper names must be written in full the first time they are used accompanied by their acronym in brackets. Subsequent use of the acronym is then preferable: Australian Labor Party (ALP); University of Queensland Press (UQP).

A period is used after initials P.D. James but in most cases not after signifying qualifications, honours or appointments: Dr, PhD.; BSc; FRSA; MP; MPs; QCs.

Quotations:
Where quotations are less than four lines long double quotation marks are employed, with single quotation marks for a quote within a quote. Quotations of more than four lines should be typed as a separate paragraph, indented by 20mm on both sides and appear without quotation marks. Quotations are indented on both sides. A colon should precede indented quotations.

Within the quotation use the style and punctuation of the original. Quotations are to be kept in their original context even if the case is wrong as in 'aborigines'.

If omitting a piece, indicate by ellipsis points ... with a space before the first and a space after the last

If interpolating a work or phrase, indicate by square [ ] brackets.

Punctuation should fall outside of the quotation marks unless it is included in the original quote (for example an exclamation or question mark) or the quotation is a complete sentence.

Punctuation:
Full stops - leave one space after before beginning of next sentence.

Colons - leave one space after

Semi-Colons - leave one space after

Dashes - please use em-dashes with no space before and after the dash.

Ellipses - please use three dots with a space before the first and after the last

Spacing of paragraphs:

No carriage returns (double spacing) are necessary between paragraphs or footnotes.

Numbers:

In descriptive matter:

Numbers under 100 are spelt out in full. Twenty-one to ninety-nine are hyphenated.

Over 100 use figures. (Note, though, that words and figures are usually not mixed: 99 to 101, not ninety-nine to 101; but see below).

For whole numbers used in conjunction with million follow the general rule (ie. spell out whole numbers between 1-99):

twelve million, but 12,136,000; 120 million but two hundred million

For a sequence of quantities be consistent:


If you must use numbers for one of the numbers in a given category then use them for all in that category. In the same sentence or paragraph items in one category may be given as numerals and spelled out in another:
 
For example: It was reported that 21 children aged twelve, 16 children aged nine and 15 children aged six were timed over fifty metres.
 
Additions to the library's stock included 125 novels, 110 children's books, 5 biographies, 12 travel books and 15 technical manuals.

For inclusive numbers:
67- 69; 312-20.
However, for 101-109; 201-209 etc use changed part only: 101-9; 302-6.

Please insert the comma in numbers of more than three figures (1,066) except of course in dates (1066) or mathematical workings.

Collective numbers are expressed as: from 160 to 200.

Percentages are usually expressed in numerals 10 percent, except where there is frequent use within an article, then 10%.

Distances, dimensions, weights, etc: follow the general rule:

Twenty-one miles per hour; five feet six; 625 feet. Do not convert miles to kilometres or pounds to dollars. Retain them in their historical context.

Use words for seventies, the nineties, the forties But not “the 1960s and seventies”.

Use “the 1960s and 1970s” not 1960’s and 1970’s. (ie. omit the apostrophe in plurals).

Dates:
These are shown as: January 15, 1970 and the 1870s.

Institutional Names:
Be careful to use correct titles of institutions. University of Sydney - not Sydney University. However, where an institution uses a capital 'T' for 'the' in, for example, The Gentle Ladies' Secondary College, use lower case for the ‘t’.

Figures and illustrations:
Photos or illustrations must be supplied as separate electronic image files (in .jpg or .tif format) which have been scanned at 300 dpi or better.

Figures, diagrams, and maps should be labelled consecutively as Figure 1, Figure 2, etc and placed in the text in their correct positions. They should always have a title and include source or copyright information if applicable. If required, footnotes should be placed immediately below each Figure.

Tables must be formatted in Word using the Table menu commands to create a proper table object. Tables must not be presented as text separated with tabs or by other manual spacing. Tables should be labelled as tables not figures.

Book Reviews:
Book reviews should be 600-800 words and should not contain Endnotes.

The format for the bibliographic details is as follows: Book Title, Author/Editor Name(s), Press, Place, Year, page no, price (in AUD$) pb/hb, price ISBN no.

For example:

The Asianisation of Australia? Some Facts About the Myths by Jayasuria Laksiri and Kee Pookong, Melbourne University Press, Melbourne, 1999, xxi + 114 pp., $16.95 (paperback), ISBN 0522848540.

Page references to texts in reviews should be in the form (27).
 
Search engine optimization (SEO) is a means of making your article more visible to anyone who might be looking for it. Please consult our guidance here .
Free article access
As corresponding author, you will receive free access to your article on Taylor & Francis Online. You will be given access to the My authored works section of Taylor & Francis Online, which shows you all your published articles. You can easily view, read, and download your published articles from there. In addition, if someone has cited your article, you will be able to see this information. We are committed to promoting and increasing the visibility of your article and have provided this guidance on how you can help.
 
Reprints and journal copies
Corresponding authors can receive a complimentary copy of the issue containing their article. Article reprints can be ordered through Rightslink® when you receive your proofs. If you have any queries about reprints, please contact the Taylor & Francis Author Services team at reprints@tandf.co.uk . To order extra copies of the issue containing your article, please contact our Customer Services team at Adhoc@tandf.co.uk .
 
Copyright
It is a condition of publication that authors assign copyright or licence the publication rights in their articles, including abstracts, to Taylor & Francis. This enables us to ensure full copyright protection and to disseminate the article, and of course the Journal, to the widest possible readership in print and electronic formats as appropriate. Authors retain many rights under the Taylor & Francis rights policies, which can be found at http://journalauthors.tandf.co.uk/preparation/copyright.asp . Authors are themselves responsible for obtaining permission to reproduce copyright material from other sources. Please note that copyright forms and book review licence forms must be hand-signed.

Permission
As an author, you are required to secure permission if you want to reproduce any figure, table, or extract from the text of another source. This applies to direct reproduction as well as "derivative reproduction" (where you have created a new figure or table which derives substantially from a copyrighted source). For further information and FAQs, please see http://journalauthors.tandf.co.uk/preparation/permission.asp .

Editorial Board
Editors :
Melissa Harper - University of Queensland
Maggie Nolan - Australian Catholic University
Julie Kimber - Swinburne University

Reviews Editors:

Tanja Luckins
- Deakin University
David Walker - Deakin University

Editorial Assistants:
Alexandra Dellios   - University of Melbourne
Kath McCabe   - University of Queensland
 
Editorial Advisory Committee :
Kate Darian-Smith - University of Melbourne
David Carter - University of Queensland
Jenny Hocking  - Monash University
Stephen Muecke - University of New South Wales  
 
Editorial Board :
Ien Ang - University of Western Sydney
Yasue Arimitsu - Doshisha University, Japan
Barbara Baird - Flinders University
Susan Ballyn - University of Barcelona
Deb Narayan Bandyopadhyay - Burdwan University, India
Nicholas Birns - The New School, New York
Frank Bongiorno - Australian National University
Ann Curthoys - University of Sydney
Robert Dixon - University of Sydney
Catriona Elder - University of Sydney
Ian Henderson - King's College, London
Lars Jensen - Roskilde University
Jacqueline Lo - Australian National University
Stuart Macintyre - University of Melbourne
John Maynard - University of Newcastle
Ian McLean - University of Wollongong
Hou Minyue - East China Normal University (Shanghai)
Lyndall Ryan - University of Newcastle
Hsu-Ming Teo - Macquarie University

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