19th-Century Music publishes articles on all aspects of music having to do with the #!#!long#!#! nineteenth century. The period of coverage has no definite boundaries; it can extend well backward into the eighteenth century and well forward into the twentieth. Published tri-annually, the journal is open to studies of any musical or cultural development that affected nineteenth-century music and any such developments that nineteenth-century music subsequently affected. The topics are as diverse as the long century itself. They include music of any type or origin and include, but are not limited to, issues of composition, performance, social and cultural context, hermeneutics, aesthetics, music theory, analysis, documentation, gender, sexuality, history, and historiography.
The only academic journal of its kind produced in the United States, Asian Survey provides a comprehensive retrospective of contemporary international relations within South, Southeast, and East Asian nations. As the Asian community’s matrix of activities becomes increasingly complex, it is essential to have a sourcebook for sound analysis of current events, governmental policies, socio-economic development, and financial institutions. In Asian Survey you’ll find that sourcebook.Asian Survey consistently publishes articles by leading American and foreign scholars, whose views supplement and contest meanings disseminated by the media. Journal coverage ranges in scope from diplomacy, disarmament, missile defense, military, and modernization, to ethnicity, ethnic violence, economic nationalism, general elections, and global capitalism.Don’t miss special thematic and the year-in-review issues that capture significant developments in Asian national development. .
Collabra: Psychology, the official journal of the Society for the Improvement of Psychological Science, is a mission-driven Open Access (OA) journal from the University of California Press that shares not only the research it publishes, but also the value created by the psychology community during the peer-review process. Collabra: Psychology has 7 sections representing the broad field of psychology, and a highlighted focus area of “Methodology and Research Practice.”
Please click through the sections below to see Calls for Papers specific to each section.
The acceptance criterion for Collabra: Psychology is scientific, methodological, and ethical rigor. While Collabra: Psychology editors and reviewers do not attempt to predict a submission’s impact to the field, nor employ any topic bias in accepting articles, they will check for rigorously and transparently conducted, statistically sound, adequately powered, and fairly analyzed research worthy of inclusion in the scholarly record. This is a focus on more objective acceptance criteria and the bar is set high.
Collabra: Psychology supports the principles of Open Science, including a mandatory open data policy, and an option for authors to choose open peer review. Please see our Editorial Policies for full details.
Senior Editorial Team
Benjamin Brown, Georgia Gwinnett College, USA
M. Brent Donnellan, Michigan State University, USA
Don Moore, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Victoria Savalei, University of British Columbia, Canada
Jennifer Tackett, Northwestern University, USA
Simine Vazire, University of California, Davis, USA
Rolf Zwaan, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
In addition to the traditional disciplines of history, political science, economics and international relations, the
Benefits to authors
We also provide many author benefits, such as free PDFs, a liberal copyright policy, special discounts on Elsevier publications and much more. Please click here for more information on our
Please see our
Ecology Law Quarterly’s primary function is to produce two high quality journals: a quarterly print version and a more frequent, cutting-edge online journal, Ecology Law Currents. UC Berkeley School of Law students manage every aspect of ELQ, from communicating with authors to editing articles to publishing the journals. In addition to featuring work by leading environmental law scholars, ELQ encourages student writing and publishes student pieces.ELQ also serves as a social and academic hub for the environmental law community at the UC Berkeley School of Law. ELQ frequently joins other Boalt Hall environmental law organizations in hosting speakers or producing events on campus. ELQ is also dedicated to sustaining and strengthening the environmental law program at Boalt Hall, and works with the Center for Law, Energy & the Environment and other sister organizations to further this goal.
Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene is a trans-disciplinary, open-access journal committed to the facilitation of collaborative, peer-reviewed research. With the ultimate objective of accelerating scientific solutions to the challenges presented by this era of human impact, it is uniquely structured into distinct knowledge domains, and gives authors the opportunity to publish in one or multiple domains, helping them to present their research and commentary to interested readers from disciplines related to their own.
Institutional Customers: UC Press has transferred subscription administration and management to JSTOR. For more information please see our Library Pages.Institutions wishing to order print single copies and print back volumes may still purchase direct from UC Press.
Journal of Popular Music Studies features work on popular music in its historical, cultural, aesthetic, and political registers. Its purview encompasses all genres of music that have been dubbed popular. The journal is also concerned with such issues as popular music's intersections with other arts, its relationships with old and new media, and its status as a field of research and critical writing. We welcome and encourage unconventional approaches (i.e. different from the standard scholarly essay) to these areas of inquiry. Each number of JPMS features book reviews, as well as occasional reviews of performances and recordings, and we regularly publish special issues co-ordinated by a guest editor or editors. We are currently inviting new submissions for future issues. Email submissions@thejpms.net for queries, and to submit manuscripts.
Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians is a leading English-language journal on the built environment.Published quarterly.Each issue of JSAH offers three to four scholarly articles on American and international topics, reviews of recently-published books, reviews of architecture exhibitions, and a variety of editorials designed to place the discipline of architectural history within a larger intellectual context.Society of Architectural HistoriansSAH is a not-for-profit membership organization and learned society that promotes the study and preservation of the built environment worldwide.
Mexican Studies/Estudios MexicanosMexican Studies/Estudios MexicanosEditor(s): Jaime E. RodríguezPublished for: The University of California Institute for Mexico and the United States, and the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de MexicoBuy Now button Online Access buttonThe rich cultural production and unique peoples of Mexico--coupled with the country's complex history, political legacy, social character, economy, and scientific development--lay the foundation for the bilingual Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos, the only U.S. published academic journal of its kind.Journal articles in both English and Spanish are welcomed from a variety of multidisciplinary perspectives and methodologies, comparative analyses notwithstanding. All content published remains focused on the contributions to and knowledge of Mexican studies as a discipline.Inside you'll find diverse, yet comprehensive coverage of Mexican relations from among the forum section, feature articles, and review essays. Interdisciplinary by nature, and international by design, Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos is not to be missed.For further information about Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos, please visit the University of California Institute for Mexico and the United States, and the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico homepages.
Fostering communications between scientists and musicians interested in the study of music phenomena, Music Perception publishes original theoretical and empirical papers, methodological articles, and critical reviews concerning the study of music.
Nova Religio presents scholarly interpretations and examinations of emergent and alternative religious movements. Original research, perspectives on the study of new religions, literature reviews, and conference updates keep scholars well informed on a wide range of topics including:New religionsNew movements within established religious traditionsNeo-indigenous, neo-polytheistic and revival movementsAncient Wisdom and New Age groupsDiasporic religious movementsMarginalized and stigmatized religionsThe journal contributes to understanding unconventional religions in their particularities and in relation to the larger social contexts in which they are situated. Nova Religio is both multidisciplinary and international in its scope.Submissions are welcome from across the academic disciplines concerning all parts of the world.
Pacific Historical ReviewPacific Historical ReviewEditor(s): David A. Johnson, Carl Abbott, Susan Wladaver-MorganPublished for: The Pacific Coast Branch, American Historical AssociationBuy Now button Online Access buttonFor over 80 years, the Pacific Historical Reviewhas accurately and adeptly covered the history of American expansion to the Pacific and beyond, as well as the post-frontier developments of the 20th-century American West. Recent articles have discussed:Empires, Frontiers, Filibusters, and Pioneers: The Transnational World of John SutterCity of the Changers: Watershed Transformations and Indigenous Persistence in Seattle“America’s Chinese”: Anti-Communism, Citizenship, and Cultural Diplomacy during the Cold War“Beyond This World of Transiency and Impermanence”: Japanese Americans, Dharma Bums, and the Making of American Buddhism during the Early Cold War YearsAn Unladylike Strike Fashionably Clothed: Mexicana and Anglo Women Garment Workers Against Tex-Sun, 1959-1963Crossing Boundaries, Creating a Homeland: The Mexican-Chinese Transpacific Journey to Becoming Mexican, 1930s-1960sOn Coral Reefs, Volcanoes, Gods, and Patriotic Geology; Or, James Dwight Dana Assembles the Pacific Basin“In a Race All Their Own”: The Quest to Make Mexicans Ineligible for U.S. CitizenshipWestern Women’s History: A ForumEvery 170-page issue of the Pacific Historical Review features an extensive section devoted to book reviews--"roughly thirty in each issue--"plus frequent review essays. The "Historical News" section provides you with information about key figures in the PCB-AHA, as well as announcements for fellowships and awards. The Pacific Historical Review also includes notes and documents, historiographies, and forums on a broad range of topics.
Representations publishes sophisticated, highly readable essays on the workings of culture, both past and present. Long known for its innovative essays on art, intellectual and legal history, science and gender studies, theories of history, and literary phenomena such as authorship and national and ethnic canon formation, Representations’ reach currently extends as well to such topics as the history of the emotions, national identity, new media, and the renewal of aesthetics in criticism. A subscription to Representations puts you at the center of a collective exploration of the boundary between nature and art, facts and artifacts. Unashamedly intellectual, the journal insists that representing is itself central to all forms of human action--indeed, to our very notion of what humans are and what action is.
Published for The International Society for the History of Rhetoric, Rhetorica includes articles, book reviews and bibliographies that examine the theory and practice of rhetoric. Published quarterly. International in scope, Rhetorica publishes articles in all periods, in English, French, German, Italian, and Spanish, and on any subject relevant to the history of rhetoric—from studies of rhetorical theory to interdisciplinary explorations of the relationship of rhetoric to poetics, philosophy, politics, religion, and law. The International Society for the History of Rhetoric Founded in 1977, The International Society for the History of Rhetoric includes members from thirty countries, and holds biennial congresses in Europe and North America. The purpose of the Society is to promote study of the theory and practice of rhetoric in all periods and languages. The Society fosters inquiry into the relationship of rhetoric to poetics, literary theory and criticism, philosophy, politics, religion, law, and other aspects of the cultural context. Membership in the Society is open to all individuals who subscribe to its aims. Membership includes receiving the Society's journal, Rhetorica, as well as its semi-annual, Rhetoric Newsletter. .
The American Biology Teacher is published by the National Association of Biology Teachers (Reston, VA). It is the official peer-reviewed journal of the National Association of Biology Teachers, issued nine times a year (monthly except June and July; November and December are combined).
The widely-respected Journal of Musicology enters its third decade as one of few comprehensive peer-reviewed journals in the discipline, offering articles in every period, field and methodology of musicological scholarship. Its contributors range from senior scholars to new voices in the field.Its reach is international, with recent articles by authors from North America, Europe and Australia, and circulation to individuals and libraries throughout the world.The Journal publishes essential reading on long-standing problems and issues in musicology, on new ideas and approaches, and on directions in the field itself.
http://www.jstor.org/page/journal/publichistorian/about.html.