期刊名称:TURKISH 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

Turkey is a country whose importance is rapidly growing in international affairs. A rapidly developing democratic state with a strong economy, complex society, active party system, and powerful armed forces, Turkey is playing an increasingly critical role in Europe, the Middle East, and the Caucasus.
Given Turkey's significance and the great interest in studying its history, politics, and foreign policy, Turkish Studies presents a forum for scholarly discussion on these topics and more. Turkish Studies features full-length articles, book reviews, and discussion roundtables covering:
The history of the Turkish republic, from the 1920s to the present, including political, social, and intellectual issues and developments.
Turkish politics, including parties, voting patterns, ideologies, biographies, the army and other institutions, as well as the political attitudes of different social groups within the country.
The composition and policy-making process of Turkish governments, including leading figures and movements.
Government policies and programs, including economic, religious, social, and all other issues.
Turkish international relations and foreign policy, including the policy-making process and Turkish relations with all countries, institutions, and movements.
Turkish Studies welcomes manuscript submissions. All feature articles should be between 5,000 and 7,500 words and sent via e-mail to editor Barry Rubin at profbarryrubin@yahoo.com Book reviews should be e-mailed to Medi Nahmiyaz at mnahmiyaz@yahoo.com Please consult our style sheet before sending any materials. We also welcome queries and proposals for articles sent to this address.
Peer Review Statement
All research articles in this journal have undergone rigorous peer review, based on initial editor screening and anonymized refereeing by two referees.
Instructions to Authors
Turkish Studies is a refereed journal. Articles submitted to Turkish Studies should be original contributions and should not be under consideration for any other publication at the same time. If another version of the article is under consideration by another publication, or has been, or will be published elsewhere, authors should clearly indicate this at the time of submission.
Turkish Studies welcomes manuscript submissions.:
All feature articles should be between 5,000 and 7,500 words and sent via e-mail to editor Barry Rubin at profbarryrubin@yahoo.com
Book reviews should be e-mailed to Medi Nahmiyaz at mnahmiyaz@yahoo.com
Please consult our style sheet before sending any materials. We also welcome queries and proposals for articles sent to these addresses.
Manuscripts
Articles should be double-spaced and with ample margins. All pages (including those containing only diagrams and tables) should be numbered consecutively.
There is no standard length for articles, but 5,000?,500 words (including notes and references) is a useful target. The article should begin with an indented and italicized summary of around 100 words, which should describe the main arguments and conclusions.
Details of the author's institutional affiliation, full address and other contact information should be included on a separate cover sheet. Any acknowledgements should be included on the cover sheet, as should a note of the exact length of the article.
All diagrams, charts, graphs and maps should be referred to as figures and consecutively numbered. Tables should be kept to a minimum and contain only essential data. Each figure and table must be given an Arabic numeral, followed by a heading, and be referred to in the text.
Following acceptance for publication, articles should be submitted in rich text format (.RTF). To facilitate the typesetting process, notes should be grouped together at the end of the file. Tables should also be placed at the end of the file. Tables should be saved as text using the appropriate function within your word processor. If this function is not available then tables should be prepared using tabs. Any diagrams or maps should be copied in uncompressed .TIF or .JPG formats in individual files. Figures should be prepared in black and white.
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 www.informaworld.com/authors_journals_copyright_position. Authors are themselves responsible for obtaining permission to reproduce copyright material from other sources.
Free article access: Corresponding authors will receive free online access to their article through our website (www.informaworld.com) and a complimentary copy of the issue containing their article. Reprints of articles published in this journal can be purchased through Rightslink?when proofs are received. If you have any queries, please contact our reprints department at reprints@tandf.co.uk
Style
Authors are responsible for ensuring that their manuscripts conform to the journal style. The editors will not undertake retyping of manuscripts before publication. Particular attention is drawn to the following points:
Spelling: American spelling and punctuation should be used throughout. Turkish letters must be used.
Numbers from one to ten should be spelled out, other numbers should be given as Arabic numerals. Dates should be in the form December 21, 1999; 1994?8; the 1990s. Use percent rather than %.
Sub-headings: should be in bold, upper and lower case. Sub-sub-headings should be in italics, upper and lower case.
Notes: The number of notes should be kept to a minimum. They should be numbered consecutively throughout the article, using a raised numeral in the text, to correspond to a list of notes placed at the end.
In the list of notes, consistency is most important in references to books, articles and manuscript sources; note that initial capitals are used for all nouns and important adjectives in titles. Some examples are given below. All of the information shown must be included.
Books:
Ronald L. Jepperson, Alexander Wendt and Peter J. Katzenstein (eds.), The Culture of National Security (New York: Columbia University Press, 1997), pp.33?9.
Feroz Ahmad, The Turkish Experiment in Democracy, 1950?975 (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1977), p.18.
Subsequent references may appear as Jepperson et al. (1997) and Ahmad (1977).
Articles:
note the sequence of volume, number, date of publication and page reference.
Sabri Sayar? 揟he Turkish Party System in Transition,?Government and Opposition, Vol.13, No.1 (Winter 1978), p.40.
Subsequent references should appear as Sayar?(1978), p.40.
In endnotes "ibid." should be used where possible, but it should not be used where the previous note consists of more than one source.
Book reviews should be preceded by full publication information, in the following form:
The Egyptian Question (1831?841): the Expansionist Policy of Mehmed Ali Pa in Syria and Asia Minor and the Reacation of the Sublime Porte by Muhammed H. Kutluo餷u (Istanbul: Eren Press, 1998). Pp.271, index. ?9.95/$39.95 (cloth). ISBN 1-2345-6789-1.
The reviewer's name (in capital letters), and affiliation (italics) should appear at the end of the review, on separate lines, ranged at the right.
Editorial Board
Editor:
Barry Rubin Biography - Director, Turkish Studies Institute, Global Research in International Affairs Center
Assistant Editor (English)
Yeru Aharoni
Assistant Editor (Turkish)
Medi Nahmiyaz
Editorial Assistant
Ehud Waldoks
International Editorial Board
Meliha Altunisi - Middle East Technical University Bülent Aras - Fatih University Gamze Avci - Leiden University Ayse Ayata - Middle East Technical University Sencer Ayata - Middle East Technical University Zeyno Baran - The Hudson Institute, Washington D.C., USA Soner Cagaptay - The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, USA Ali Çarkoglu - Sabanci University Bilge Criss - Bilkent University Mine Eder - Bogazici University Hakan Erdem - Sabanci University Metin Heper - Bilkent University Ersin Kalaycoglu - Sabanci University Ali Karaosmanoglu - Bilkent University Kemal Kirisci - Bogazici University Heinz Kramer - Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik Research Institute, Berlin Ömer Kürkçüoglu - Ankara University Sule Kut - Bilgi University Alan Makovsky - US House of Representatives Committee on International Relations Andrew Mango - University of London Lenore Martin - Emmanuel College and Harvard University Ziya Önis - Koc University Sabri Sayari - Georgetown University Frank Tachau - University of Illinois Gareth Winrow - Bilgi University
Manuscripts and Editorial Correspondence should be sent exclusively as attached word files to:
Barry Rubin at profbarryrubin@yahoo.com
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