期刊名称:GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Global Environmental Politics examines the relationship between global political forces and environmental change, with particular attention given to the implications of local-global interactions for environmental management as well as the implications of environmental change for world politics. Each issue is divided into Research Articles and a Forum section. Research articles are full-length papers that contain an original contribution to research on global environmental politics. They may focus on issues such as the role of states, multilateral institutions and agreements, trade, international finance, corporations, science and technology, and grassroots movements. Forum articles comprise short commentaries that should stimulate discussion on salient issues of interest to other scholars in the field. The aim of these articles is to provoke thought, discussion, and debate amongst the readership.
Instructions to Authors Submission Guidelines
1. Mail three copies of your paper to:
The Editors Global Environmental Politics University of Sydney Faculty of Arts Dept. of Government and International Relations Merewether Building HO4 Sydney NSW 2006 AUSTRALIA
2. Or, email one copy of your paper to: gep@econ.usyd.edu.au. The GEP editorial office at the University of Sydney will then print three copies.
Manuscripts must be double-spaced. Articles for the Forum section should be no longer than 2,000 words, including footnotes and bibliography. Research articles should be between 7,000 and 10,000 words, including footnotes and bibliography. A 150-word abstract must accompany all submissions. All manuscripts will be refereed. Authors of research articles should do their best to conceal their identity in the text as research articles will be double blind refereed. For Forum articles, reviewers remain anonymous, however authors do not. Authors should follow the footnote and reference style guidelines below.
Footnote and Reference Style Guidelines
As a rule, GEP uses footnotes to cite sources of evidence and references only, and not to present supplementary evidence and reasoning. If such additional material is needed, the reader should find it with the rest of the text. An exception could be made for a brief addition that would disturb the flow of the text.
The reference list should contain the complete facts of publication or availability for each source cited, using the author-date form illustrated below. Provide author first names when available. Article and book title use the "up" style and do not use quotation marks. In the paper's body, cite a published source in a footnote that shows the author's last name or names and the date, adding page numbers when quoting or referring to a particular passage. For unpublished sources, see the examples below. A note may include a brief annotation that helps the reader understand the source's value or viewpoint.
Form samples for references and footnote citations follow:
For a book in the reference list: Paehlke, Robert. 1989. Environmentalism and the Future of Progressive Politics. New Haven: Yale University Press. Footnote: Paehlke 1989, 52.
For an Edited Collection: Victor, David G., Kal Raustiala, and Eugene B. Skolnikoff, eds. 1998. The Implementation and Effectiveness of International Environmental Commitments: Theory and Practice. Cambridge: MIT Press. Footnote: Victor, Raustiala, and Skolnikoff 1998.
For a chapter in a book: Connolly, Barbara, Tamar Gutner, and Hildegard Berdarff. 1996. Organizational Inertia and Environmental Assistance in Eastern Europe. In Institutions for Environmental Aid, edited by Robert O. Keohane and Marc A. Levy, 281-323. Cambridge; MIT Press. Footnote: Connolly, Gutner, and Berdarff 1996, 285..
For a journal article: Charnovitz, Steve. 1993. The Environment versus Trade Rules: Defogging the Debate. Environmental Law 23 (2): 475-517. Footnote: Charnovitz 1993, 475.
For a government document: U.S. Senate. 1984. Committee on Foreign Relations. Chemical Warfare: Arms Control and Nonproliferation: Joint Hearings before the Committee on Foreign Relations and the Subcommittee on Energy, Nuclear Proliferation and Government Processes. 98th Cong, 2d sess., 28 June. Footnote: U.S. Senate 1984.
For a newspaper or magazine article: No reference listing is needed. Include relevant information in a footnote: Los Angeles Times, 3 May 1993, A1. Authors' names and article titles are omitted except when an author prefers to add them because they enhance understanding of points made in the text or the source.
For a publication distributed electronically: In addition to the usual information, please list the service name, the name of the vendor providing the service, and any identifying numbers.
For an unpublished interview: No reference listing is needed. Include relevant information in a footnote: Author's interview with James Murphy, Washington, D.C., July 1992. If the interviewee was promised anonymity, the informant should be described as precisely as possible, for example as a member of a category of individuals, without identifying the person.
For published or broadcast interviews: No reference listing is needed. Include all information in a footnote: Interview with James Murphy by Robert MacNeil, MacNeil/Lehrer News Hour, Public Broadcasting System, 23 February 1993.
For a document in an archive, show only the full names of the collection and the depository, and the location of the depository in the reference list. In a footnote identify the author, title, date, series title (if any), name of the collection, and any information as to the document's exact location.
In the reference list, show sources primarily in alphabetical order by the first author's last name, and secondarily in chronological order.
For questions of style not answered here (e.g., punctuation, capitalization, and tables), refer to University of Chicago Press, 1993, The Chicago Manual of Style, 14th ed., Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Please consult the GEP editorial office if any of these guidelines would pose a special difficulty.
Editorial Board Editorial Information
Editorial Address Global Environmental Politics University of Sydney Faculty of Arts Dept. of Government and International Relations Merewether Building HO4 Sydney NSW 2006 AUSTRALIA gep@econ.usyd.edu.au
Book Review Address Elizabeth R. DeSombre Book Review Editor, Global Environmental Politics Department of Political Science Wellesley College 106 Central Street Wellesley, MA 02481
Editors
Jennifer Clapp, University of Waterloo, Canada
Matthew Paterson, University of Ottawa, Canada
Associate Editors
Ken Conca, University of Maryland, USA
Ron Mitchell, University of Oregon, USA
Peter Newell, University of East Anglia, UK
Kate O'Neill, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Review Editor
Elizabeth R. DeSombre, Wellesley College, USA
Managing Editor
Sharon Goad, University of Sydney, Australia
Editorial Board
Steinar Andresen, Fridtjof Nansen Institute, NORWAY Karin Backstrand, Lund University, SWEDEN J. Samuel Barkin, University of Florida, USA Amita Baviskar, Institute of Economic Growth, INDIA Steven Bernstein, University of Toronto, CANADA Michele Betsill, Colorado State University, USA Frank Biermann, Vrije Universiteit, THE NETHERLANDS Pamela Chasek, International Institute for Sustainable Development, USA Simon Dalby, University of Carleton, CANADA Andrew Dobson, Keele University, UK John Dryzek, Australian National University, AUSTRALIA Robyn Eckersley, University of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA Lorraine Elliott, Australian National University, AUSTRALIA Matthias Finger, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, SWITZERLAND Aarti Gupta, Wageningen University, THE NETHERLANDS Tamar Gutner, American University, USA Peter Haas, University of Massachusetts, USA Kathryn Hochstetler, University of New Mexico, USA Andrew Hurrell, Oxford University, UK Patricia Kameri-Mbote, University of Nairobi, KENYA Norichika Kanie, Tokyo Institute of Technology, JAPAN Pushpam Kumar, University of Liverpool, UK Ronnie Lipschutz, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA Karen Litfin, University of Washington, USA Alejandro Nadal, El Colegio de M¨¦xico, MEXICO Aseem Prakash, University of Washington, USA Thomas Princen, University of Michigan, US Ian Rowlands, University of Waterloo, CANADA Miranda Schreurs, University of Maryland, USA Tora Skodvin, CICERO, NORWAY Detlef Sprinz, Potsdam Institute, GERMANY Larry Swatuk, University of Botswana, BOTSWANA Arild Underdal, University of Oslo, NORWAY Stacy VanDeveer, University of New Hampshire, USA Eduardo Viola, University of Brasilia, BRASILIA Shiv Visvanathan, Dhirubhai Ambani Institute of Information and Communication Technology, INDIA John Vogler, Keele University, UK Paul Wapner, American University, USA Erika Weinthal, Duke University, USA Marc Williams, University of New South Wales, AUSTRALIA Oran Young, University of California Santa Barbara, USA
Founding Editor: Peter Dauvergne
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