scholarly journals Editorial

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-2
Author(s):  
Ali Tilbe

On behalf of the editorial team of Border Crossing journal, I am very delighted to introduce the first issue of the twenty first volume. In the first instance, our journal is an international multidisciplinary peer-reviewed journal that has been in publication since 2011 and publishes quality articles from any fields of Social Sciences and Humanities. We would like to emphasize that Border Crossing has switched to the “open issue” model and promises to complete the rapid refereeing process without delay according to the wishes of the authors. Thus, we publish two issues per year covering the first and second half of each year. Herewith, we would like to express our sincere gratitude to our authors, reviewers, editorial board members, co-editors and readers who contributed to the development and success of our Journal.

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-2
Author(s):  
Ibrahim Sirkeci

On behalf of the editorial team of Border Crossing journal, I am pleased to introduce the first issue of the tenth volume. Border Crossing aims to offer a multidisciplinary venue for sharing interesting and novel research from any fields of Social Sciences and Humanities. The “open issue” model we have started last year seems appreciated by authors and readers as it allows us to release the articles once they are through the peer-review process and finalised without delay which is normally the case for most journals. In this issue, we bring four articles and a book review to you.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bert Schreurs ◽  
Angus Duff ◽  
Pascale M. Le Blanc ◽  
Thomas H. Stone

Purpose This article aims to provide prospective authors guidelines that will hopefully enable them to submit more competitive manuscripts to journals publishing careers research.Design/methodology/approach Based on their experience as an author, reviewer and editorial team member, the authors identify the main criteria that a quantitative study must meet to be considered for publication in international peer-reviewed journals covering career-related topics. They emphasize the importance of contributing to the careers literature and of designing the study in accordance with the research question.Findings Manuscripts are rejected because they are insufficiently innovative, and/or because sample, instruments and design are not appropriate to answer the research question at hand. Cross-sectional designs cannot be used to answer questions of mediation but should not be discarded automatically since they can be used to address other types of questions, including questions about nesting, clustering of individuals into subgroups, and to some extent, even causality.Originality/value The manuscript provides an insight into the decision-making process of reviewers and editorial board members and includes recommendations on the use of cross-sectional data.


Author(s):  
Paul Allatson

Welcome to the inaugural issue of PORTAL On behalf of the Executive Editorial Committee of PORTAL Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies, it is a great pleasure to announce the virtual birth of this fully peer-reviewed journal under the auspices of UTSePress, the exciting new electronic publishing enterprise housed at the central library at the University of Technology, Sydney (UTS), Australia. PORTAL itself is edited by staff from the Institute for International Studies, a dynamic research and teaching centre at UTS. The launch of PORTAL's inaugural issue will take place simultaneously in Sydney, Australia, and Guadalajara, México, on January 28 (Sydney) / 27 (Guadalajara) 2004. The trans-Pacific axial enabling this twin launch is emblematic of the many axes of dialogue that, it is to be hoped, will characterize the content and reception of this and future issues of Portal. We are grateful to the many people at the Center for Social Sciences and Humanities at la Universidad de Guadalajara, México, for their provision of the technologies and tequila that will facilitate Portal's digital launch in a different space and timezone to its 'homebirth' in Sydney, Australia. As PORTAL's 'Focus and Scope' statement indicates, the journal is dedicated to publishing scholarship by practitioners of-and dissenters from-international, regional, area, migration, and ethnic studies. PORTAL is also committed to providing a space for cultural producers interested in the internationalization of cultures. With these aims in mind we have conceived PORTAL as a "multidisciplinary venture," to use Michel Chaouli's words. That is, PORTAL signifies "a place where researchers [and cultural producers] are exposed to different ways of posing questions and proffering answers, without creating out of their differing disciplinary languages a common theoretical or methodological pidgin" (2003, p. 57). Our hope is that scholars working in the humanities, social sciences, and potentially other disciplinary areas, will encounter in PORTAL a range of critical and creative scenarios about contemporary societies and cultures and their material and imaginative relation to processes of transnationalization, polyculturation, transmigration, globalization, and anti-globalization. Our use of scenario here is drawn from Néstor García Canclini, for whom the term designates "a place where a story is staged" (1995, p. 273). García Canclini's interest lies in comprehending the staging of stories at "the intercrossings on the borders between countries, in the fluid networks that interconnect towns, ethnic groups, and classes, … the popular and the cultured, the national and the foreign" (1995, p. 273). Such stories indicate some of the many possible international scenarios that PORTAL will stage in the future. A key to our ambitions for PORTAL is an editorial commitment to facilitating dialogue between international studies practitioners working anywhere in the world, and not simply or exclusively in the "North," "the West," or the "First World." This fundamental policy is reflected in our Editorial Board, with members drawn from respected academic and research institutions in many countries and continents. We would like to extend our warmest thanks to the many people across the globe who, site unseen, graciously agreed to support this publishing and intellectual endeavour by joining the Editorial Board and wholeheartedly endorsing the journal's editorial brief. PORTAL's commitment to fashioning a genuinely "international" studies rubric is also reflected in our willingness to accept critical and creative work in English as well as in a number of other languages: Bahasa Indonesia, Chinese, Croatian, English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Spanish, and Serbian. We anticipate that this list will grow. Portal is also committed to the timely and constructive provision of feedback to submitted work. There will be two issues per year: one in January, the other in July. These editorial protocols make PORTAL a uniquely "international" publishing venture. Immense gratitude is due to the team at UTSePress for their dedication to, and faith in, this project. In particular, we would like to thank Alex Byrne, Fides Lawton, Richard Buggy, and Shannon Elbourne, for their hard work, support, and understanding. Thanks go to all the members of the PORTAL Editorial Committee for their contributions. Finally, special thanks to our Editorial Assistant Wayne Peake, Research Assistant John McPhillips and Editorial Committee member Kate Barclay who did so much to ensure the appearance of this inaugural issue. Paul Allatson, Chair, PORTAL Editorial Committee


2017 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-2
Author(s):  
Bikash Shrestha

Sixteen years! Our own Medical Journal of Shree Birendra Hospital is in the middle of charming teen years now. Yes, it is definitely sweet sixteen! And yes, it has definitely come a long way since its inception and we must congratulate ourselves and feel proud that we are here, and with more zeal to improve and learn. I would like to thank all our readers, authors, reviewers as well as editors and mentors of NepJol for their continuous support and love which has kept the journal alive and kicking for so many years!First of all, we are happy to share some news. We have recently updated our journal guidelines for authors. We have tried to simplify the whole process of submission. We hope that the simpler guidelines will make the authors more comfortable to submit their articles online. We have also been successful in adding many prominent national and international editors to our editorial board. We have added Dr Samir Lamichhane from Maharajgunj Medical Campus, Institute of Medicine, Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu, Nepal (Department of Pharmacology), Dr Manisha Bajracharya from KIST Medical College and Teaching Hospital, Imadole, Lalitpur (Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology), Dr. Barsha Bajracharya from Shree Birendra Hospital, NAIHS, Kathmandu, Nepal (Department of Dental Surgery) as our Editorial Board members. We must consider ourselves very privileged that some reputed academicians have joined our team as international editors. We are extremely honored to have Prof. Dr. Babill Stray-Pederson, University of Oslo, Norway (Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology), Prof. Dr. Deepak Batura from London North West Healthcare NHS, London, UK (Department of Urosurgery), Dr. Dipendra Raj Pandeya from Al Jouf University, Saudi Arabia (Department of Clinical Biochemistry), Dr. Santosh Pandit from Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden (Department of Biology and Biological Engineering) and Dr. Usman Mahboob from Khyber Medical University, Pakistan (Institute of Health Professions Education And Research) as international editors in our team. We are very excited to have such distinguished mentors as our team members. Thank you and welcome to all.With the vigor and enthusiasm of additional editors, we have set some goals for our journal. First and foremost, a journal has to be punctual. We need to maintain the punctuality of our journal. Presently, we have been lagging behind in publication of issues. With two consecutive future publications, we aim to publish further issues on specified time biannually (Jan and July).Secondly, with the guidance and support of additional editors, we hope that our journal would flourish more in the national as well as international field. For this, we expect that we shall be able to involve all the editorial board members in the journal equally and effectively. We are certain that their invaluable contribution would be vital for the progress of our journal. Thirdly, we have initiated steps towards indexing and hope that we shall soon get indexed into reputed indexing services. With better indexing, we believe that the overall scope of our journal will widen and we shall have broader and discerning audience. Fourthly, we aim to collaborate with different organizations and conduct regular training sessions for our authors in scientific manuscript writing. We firmly believe that training is imperative for the authors to improve their writing skills. With better quality of authors, needless to reiterate, we will get better articles and our journal would be at par with any other well-known medical journal that we look up to. But whatever we bring out, without feedback, we-the editorial team-too will not learn, nor grow. I would like to conclude by requesting all our readers, authors, reviewers, editors, as well as mentors to give us feedback and comments, so that we can strive continuously for betterment. Lastly, I would like to congratulate and express our gratitude to the editors who have come on board. Welcome and thank you all once again.


2018 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 219-219

Classen, S. (2018). Editorial: Growth and Advances of OTJR. OTJR: Occupation, Participation and Health, 38, 3-5. DOI: 10.1177/1539449217747419 On page 3 of OTJR: Occupation, Participation and Health Volume 38(1), the core editorial team was incorrectly identified. The corrected sentence is provided below: Specifically—we have doubled the size of the core editorial team (which consists of editor-in-chief, assistant editor, and editorial fellow), more than doubled the size of the editorial board members (which consists of associate editors and review board members), and created and filled 13 new positions on the editorial board.


The East African Journal of Education and Social Sciences (EAJESS) acknowledges the commitment of the following Editorial Board Members who reviewed manuscripts in Volume 1, Issue 1 (April to June 2020), which has just been published:


2011 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
David Squires ◽  
Gráìnne Conole

Issue 7.1 represented the annual special issue of selected papers presented at ALT-C 98. This issue is the first time the new editorial team have edited an 'open' issue comprised of papers selected from those submitted as part of the normal refereeing process. The broad scope of the papers in this open issue - courseware design, collaborative learning, evaluation, student use of electronic bibliographic databases, staff development - bears witness to one of the most fascinating aspects of learning technology: its broad-based interdisciplinary nature.DOI:10.1080/0968776990070201


2015 ◽  
Vol 7 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gillian Keyms
Keyword(s):  

Please see pdf for the list of editorial board members.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-108
Author(s):  
Masdar Hilmy

This article attempts to provide a breakthrough which I call mode of production theory. This theory will be employed to analyze the contemporary phenomenon of radical Islamism. The mode of production theory is meant to bridge the two clashing theoretical paradigms in social sciences and humanities, i.e., Weberian and Marxian. Despite its bridging nature, the paper argues that the two cannot be merged within one single thread. This is because each paradigm has its own epistemological basis which is irreconcilable to one another. Mostly adapted from Marx’s theory, the current theory of the mode of production covers five interrelated aspects, namely social, political, economic, cultural, and symbolic structures. If Marx’s mode of production theory heavily relies on a material and economic basis, the theory used in this paper accommodates cultural and symbolic structures that are Weberian in nature. Although the two paradigms can operate together, the strength of structure (Marxian) overpowers the strength of culture (Weberian). This paper further argues that such cultural-based aspects as ideology, norms, and values play as mobilizing factors under a big schematic dominant structure in the rise and development of the radical Islamist groups.


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