La Revista Musical Chilena ha identificado como sus principales a´reas de intere´s, la cultura musical de Chile, considerando tanto los aspectos musicales propiamente tales, como el marco histo´rico y sociocultural, desde la perspectiva de la musicologi´a y de otras disciplinas relacionadas. Al respecto, considera propuestas de arti´culos que traten sobre temas vinculados a compositores, ejecutantes e instrumentos de la mu´sica de arte, folclo´rica, popular urbana e indi´gena, al igual que propuestas de arti´culos atinentes a manuscritos, investigadores, aspectos teo´ricos y modelos musicolo´gicos, adema´s de nuevos enfoques de la musicologi´a como disciplina, tanto en Chile como en Ame´rica Latina. El propo´sito de la RMCh es el ensanchamiento permanente de los horizontes musicolo´gicos de Chile y Ame´rica Latina.
Dialectology Magazine and Popular Traditions, created in 1944, is the national publication, specializing in ethnography, and oldest continuously existing in Spain. Dedicated to socio-cultural anthropology, extended this research in its broadest sense, including the tongue, and specifically its manifestations dialect. It is open to the collaboration of the international community of researchers interested in this area of ??knowledge. Publishes an annual volume of six hundred pages, divided into two semiannual issues (July and December).Its format conforms to international standards of UNESCO for editing scientific publications and stripped appears in major academic databases and professional international.
Romani Studies is an international, interdisciplinary journal publishing modern scholarship in all branches of Romani/Gypsy studies. Founded in 1888, the Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society was published in four series up to 1982. In 2000, the journal became Romani Studies. Under the sponsorship of the Gypsy Lore Society (formerly Gypsy Lore Society, North American Chapter), Romani Studies features articles on the cultures of groups traditionally known as Gypsies as well as Travellers and other peripatetic groups. These groups include, among others, those referring to themselves as Rom, Roma, Romanichels, Sinti and Travellers. The journal publishes articles in history, anthropology, sociology, linguistics, art, literature, folklore and music, as well as reviews of books and audiovisual materials.
Experts agree that for the last half-dozen years The Russian Review has reigned as a premier journal in Slavic Studies. Its prescient receptivity to cultural studies, its admirable emphasis on intellectual and scholarly quality over 'partiinost' and its unusually rigorous adherence to publication schedules have made The Russian Review a model of academic scholarship and professionalism. The Russian Review appears punctually, rarely contains typographical errors and stylistic solecisms, teems with stimulating, original insights, and invariably explores new ground. It is one of the only professional journals worth reading from cover to cover, and its achievements are all the more impressive in light of its independence from dues-paying organizations - Helena Goscilo, University of Pittsburgh.