期刊名称:EUROPEAN UNION POLITICS

ISSN:1465-1165
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD, 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON, ENGLAND, EC1Y 1SP
  出版社网址:http://www.sagepub.co.uk/
期刊网址:http://eup.sagepub.com/
影响因子: 1.754(2015年) 1.439(2014年) 2.036(2013年) 1.774 (2012年) 1.256(2011年)
主题范畴:POLITICAL SCIENCE

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



About the journal

 Cover

 

"European Union Politics brings together substantive expertise on EU issues with theoretical understanding of debates in the social sciences, and methodological sophistication in the presentation of arguments. It is clearly the best existing journal on EU." George Tsebelis UCLA, USA

"In my opinion, it has become the leading social science journal dealing with EU issues... must reading for anyone interested in the EU as well as for those interested in theoretical developments in comparative politics and international relations" James Caporaso, University of Washington, Seattle, USA

"The journal is essential reading for all those seeking an analytic understanding of how the European Union works now, and will work over the horizon" Patrick Dunleavy, London School of Economics, UK

European Union Politics is an exciting international journal that provides the forum for advanced research on all aspects of the processes of government, politics and policy in the European Union. Launched by a global editorial team and with a commitment to the highest scholarly standards, European Union Politics adopts a transnational approach to the challenges that the project of European integration faces in the 21st century.

Indexing/Abstracting Services:

Current Contents / Social and Behavioral Sciences
European Access
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences
International Political Science Abstracts
ISI Alerting Services
Policy & Politics
Social Sciences Citation Index
Social SciSearch
Social Services Abstracts
Sociological Abstracts
Worldwide Political Science Abstracts


Instructions to Authors

 

1. Papers should preferably be written in English. They should not have been published already, nor be currently under consideration elsewhere. Only papers corresponding to the following guidelines will be considered. All papers - including contributions to the forum section - are refereed.

2. Each contribution should come with the following information on a separate sheet:

a) title of paper, date and word count;

b) author's full name, affiliation, position, institutional email and fax address;

c) abstract (100-125 words): background, aim, method, results, conclusion;

d) up to 5 key words, arranged alphabetically;

Authors who have access to e-mail are requested to send an electronic version of their article to eup@uni-konstanz.de when their submission is in the mail.

3. Articles must be typed in double spacing throughout on one side of A4 or US standard 8.5X11 inch paper with generous margins on all sides. All pages should be numbered. You can submit articles by email to eup@uni-konstanz.de, but must send one printed version of the manuscript, together with an IMB-readable computer disk version of the article, to the editorial office of the journal. If you do not want to submit your article by email, please send five printed versions and the IBM-readable computer disk to the editorial office. Please retain a copy. EUP does not return any submitted copies.

4. The maximum length should be 9000 words, including notes and references. The typescript should be carefully checked for errors before it is submitted for publication. Authors are responsible for the accuracy of quotations, for supplying complete and correct references, and for obtaining permission where needed to cite another person's material.

5. EUP encourages replication of empirical work. In order to facilitate this, we ask authors to make their data available to others at the same time as their article is published, either on their own website or in some equivalent manner.

6. Lengthy quotations (of more than 40 words) should be displayed and indented; shorter quotes should be retained within the body of the text; single quotation marks please.

7. Do not use a comma in thousands but do use one in tens of thousand and above: e.g. 1298; 14,890; 345,246; 1,000,098.

Use the least number of numerals possible in pagination and in dates: e.g. 42-5, 1975-6, 1954-67, 130-1. But use 10-14, 10-11 as these represent single words.

Decimal points are never raised of the line. There is no zero before a point for probability and correlations where the number is always less than one.

8. Write dates and decades as follows: 30 September 1986, 1960s, mid 1930s.

9. The singular of the following abbreviations takes full points: Vol., Ch., e.g., ed. but please use Vols, Chs and eds for plural. Please no comma after e.g., i.e. or cf. while etc. is usually preceded by a comma in a list.

10. Tables and figures should be presented on separate sheets of paper at the end of the article. Their position within the text should be clearly indicated. Further guidelines will follow, once your article is accepted for publication. Tables, figures and section headings should be written in lower-case letters. Headings should not be numbered.

11. Notes and references should be in double-spacing. Please check for discrepancies between in-text-notes/references and those listed.

Essential notes should be indicated by superscript Arabic numbers in the text, and presented at the end of the text before the references. Articles should have a maximum of ten notes. The first, unnumbered, note should include any acknowledgements and thanks as well as an indication where your data is available.

For citing and referencing use the Harvard-style system. References cites in the text should read as Brown (1975: 63-4) or Brown and Smith (1975, 1980). Use 'et al.' when citing a work by more than two authors, e.g. Brown et al. (1981). The letters a, b, c etc. should be used to distinguish citations of different works by the same author in the same year, e.g. Brown (1975a, b). When citing a new edition of a previously published work, include both dates, e.g. Durkheim (1912/1976), in text and references. If author's name is not in the text, insert last name, comma and year, e.g. (Van Dijk, 1998). Enclose within a single pair of parentheses a series of references, separated by semicolons, e.g. (Black and Williams, 1986; Downey and Jones, 1985; Perry, 1977). Use also parentheses to insert any brief phrase associated with the reference, e.g. (but see Jones, 1990: 123-4). For an institutional authorship, supply the minimum citation from the beginning of the complete reference, e.g. (US Bureau of the Census, 1994: 36).

The reference list should be alphabetically ordered and with headed references. Please use the following style:

Journal article

Tsebelis, George (1994) 'The Power of the European Parliament as a Conditional Agenda Setter', American Political Science Review 88(1): 128-42.

Book

Ullman, Richard H. (1991) Securing Europe. Twickenham: Adamtine Press.

Chapter in book

Spence, David (1994) 'Structure, Functions and Procedures in the Commission', in Geoffrey Edwards and David Spence (eds) The European Commission, pp. 97-116. Essex: Longman.

(Working) Paper

Hug, Simon and Thomas König (1999) 'Ratifying Amsterdam', Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, 2-6 September 1999, Atlanta.

Unpublished work

Pearce, David G. (1987) 'Renegotiation-proof Equilibria: Collective Rationality and Inter-temporal Cooperation', Mimeo, Yale University.

Website

Tsebelis, George (2001) 'Veto Players Data', URL (consulted Jan. 2001): http:/www.polisci.ucla.edu/tsebelis/

Surnames containing de, van, von etc. should be listed under D and V with capital letters.

References where the first-named author is the same should be listed as follows: Single author references in date order; References by more than one author in alphabetical order according to the second author's name; In the event of more than one entry having the same date a, b, etc. must be inserted.

Please check that all periodical data are included - volume, issue and page numbers, publisher, place of publication, etc.

12. Our spelling style is based on the Oxford English Dictionary and the guidelines laid down in Hart's Rules for Compositors (Oxford); but US spellings are retained in manuscripts of North American origin. We also endorse the guidelines provided by the American Psychological Association and the British Sociological Association for non-sexist and non-racist language.

13. Authors will be asked to provide a diskette containing the final version of their paper following acceptance for publication. The author is responsible for ensuring that the final hard copy and diskette versions of the manuscript are identical.

14. Authors are sent proofs for checking and correction. Proofs should be corrected carefully; the responsibility for detecting errors lies with the author. Authors will receive twenty-five reprints of their article plus one copy of the journal on publication.

15. Copyright. Before publication authors are requested to grant an exclusive publishing license to SAGE Publications, which has the right to sub-license, subject to retaining their right to reuse the material in other publications written or edited by themselves and due to be published at least one year after initial publication in this journal. Photocopies may be made from the journal without the need for prior permission, for teaching purposes, provided they are made from a copy owned by the institution or individual responsible for the course provided.

Manuscripts should be submitted to Professor Gerald Schneider, Editor, European Union Politics, Department of Politics and Management, University of Konstanz, Box D 86, D-78457 Konstanz, Germany.

E-mail: eup@uni-konstanz.de

Homepage: http://www.uni-konstanz.de/EUP/

Please note that copies of submitted manuscripts cannot be returned.

All contributions to the forum section should be sent to Dr. Simon Hix, Department of Government, London School of Economics and Political Science,

Houghton Street, London WC2A 2AE, United Kingdom.

Contributors from Northern America can obtain further information from Professor Matthew Gabel, Department of Political Science, University of Kentucky, 1615 Patterson Office Tower, Lexington

KY 40506-0027, USA.


Editorial Board

 

Executive Editor
Gerald Schneider ,University of Konstanz, Germany  


Associate Editors
Matthew Gabel ,University of Kentucky, Lexington, USA  
Simon Hix ,London School of Economics and Political Science, UK  


Chair
Fulvio Attina ,University of Catania, Italy  


Managing Editors
Sandra Krapf ,University of Konstanz, Germany  
Nora Rohner ,University of Konstanz, Germany  
Lena-Maria Schaffer ,University of Konstanz, Germany  
Cornelia Schmidt ,University of Konstanz, Germany  


Editorial Board
Karen J Alter ,Northwestern University, Evanston, USA  
Mark Aspinwall ,Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, UK  
Christopher J Anderson ,Syracuse University, USA  
Donatella della Porta ,European University Institute, Florence, Italy  
Mark Hallerberg ,University of Pittsburgh, USA  
Liesbet Hooghe ,University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA  
Simon Hug ,University of St Gallen, Switzerland  
Richard S Katz ,Johns Hopkins University, USA  
Kenneth Kollman ,University of Michigan, USA  
Thomas König ,German University of Administrative Sciences, Speyer, Germany  
Michael Laver ,New York University, USA  
Gary Marks ,University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA  
Helen Milner ,Princeton University, USA  
Ignacio Sanchez-Cuenca ,Instituto Juan March, Spain  
Bernard Steunenberg ,Leiden University, The Netherlands  
Kaare Strøm ,University of California San Diego, USA  


International Advisory Board
Luciano Bardi ,University of Pisa, Italy  
James A Caporaso ,University of Washington, USA  
Sabine Carey ,Political Science, University of Nottingham, UK  
Walter Carlsnaes ,Uppsala University, Sweden  
Lars Erik Cederman ,Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Switzerland  
Maurizio Cotta ,University of Siena, Italy  
Christophe Crombez ,Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium  
Geoffrey Evans ,Nuffield College, University of Oxford, UK  
Fabio Franchino ,University College London, UK  
Mark Franklin ,University of Connecticut, USA  
Jeffry Frieden ,Harvard University, Cambridge, USA  
Christopher Hill ,London School of Economics, UK  
Martin Holland ,University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand  
Ian Holliday ,City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong  
Katharina Holzinger ,Universitdt Hamburg, Germany  
Radoslaw Markowski ,Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland  
Michael Marsh ,University of Dublin Trinity College, Republic of Ireland  
Alfio Mastropaolo ,University of Torino, Italy  
Iain McLean ,Nuffield College, University of Oxford, UK  
Anand Menon ,University of Birmingham, UK  
Andrew Moravcsik ,Princeton University, USA  
Philomena Murray ,University of Melbourne, Parkville, Australia  
Meltem Müftüler-Bac ,Sabanci University, Istanbul, Turkey  
Mark Pollack ,University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA  
Alberta Sbragia ,University of Pittsburgh, USA  
Richard Sinnott ,University College Dublin, Republic of Ireland  
Gabor Toka ,Central European University, Hungary  
Alfred Tovias ,Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel  
George Tsebelis ,University of California, Los Angeles, USA  
Takato Ueta ,International Christian University, Tokyo, Japan  


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