FYI

From: eusa [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Figliulo, Joseph A
Sent: Monday, March 23, 2015 10:11 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Call for JEPP Special Issues

Dear EUSA members:

Please find below a call for proposals for two JEPP special issues to be 
published in the first half of 2017. Do not hesitate to contact us, the journal 
editors (Jeremy Richardson 
[[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] 
and myself 
[[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]), if 
you have any queries). Don’t forget to check the JEPP website for recent 
Special Issues (http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rjpp20#.VQ_ojULz34w).

With best wishes,

Berthold


JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN PUBLIC POLICY - CALL FOR SPECIAL ISSUES 2017

Next submission date for 2017 special issues: 31 May 2015

Procedure for submitting a special issue proposal to the Editors
JEPP now receives a large number of Special Issue proposals and experience 
suggests that a good special issue can take up to eighteen months from 
acceptance of the initial proposal to submission of the final manuscript to the 
copy editor. Whilst some proposals are submitted in embryonic form, others are 
more fully developed and sometimes accompanied by draft papers. These 
differences give rise to problems of fairness in judging proposals.

In the interests of fairness, the Editors assess formal proposals within a 
‘gathered field’ for each available special issue ‘slot’, some 12-18 months 
ahead of the planned publication date for a given special issue volume. For 
each vacant slot there is a date by which a formal proposal must reach the 
Editors. However, the Editors are happy to give informal advice in advance of a 
formal submission. If a proposal is deemed by the Editors to stand little 
chance of acceptance, the proposers will be advised of this immediately, in 
order to enable them to approach other journals (or book publishers) without 
undue delay. Once all proposals have been received by the due date, the Editors 
will normally reach a decision within two weeks. At the Editors’ discretion, 
some proposals which are not selected at that time may be considered along with 
other proposals for the next vacant slot.

A formal proposal should contain the following information.
- The names, addresses, and positions of the proposed Guest Editor(s) together 
with brief biographical details.
- The title of the proposed special issue.
- A brief description of the rationale behind the proposal, its planned scope, 
its innovative nature in relation to existing published work in the particular 
field, and an indication of its likely appeal to readers not specializing in 
the particular field (for example the broader theoretical or methodological 
focus of the proposed special issue).
- Names and position of each proposed contributor and a 300-word abstract of 
their planned paper, together with an indication of their commitment to 
contribute to the special issue. (It is appreciated that the draft abstracts 
are indicative but it is important that contributors are ‘signed up’ and not 
just on your wish list!). Since all of the papers for the Special Issue will be 
subject to standard peer review, you may want to factor in that not necessarily 
all papers will make it through that process. Hence, submitting a proposal with 
merely 8 proposed papers (8000 words being the standard article length), you 
will stand the risk of losing several papers as a result of peer review. We 
thus encourage submissions containing more than 8 paper proposals.
- Details of the project management ‘milestones’ such as any workshops that are 
planned, date by which first and subsequent drafts are to be submitted, the 
time allowed for the refereeing process etc. (the Editors are happy to advise 
on these matters, but it is best to assume that some authors and referees will 
not adhere to your timetable!).
- The planned word count of each paper and confirmation that the total word 
count will not exceed 64,000 words including refs, notes, diagrams and tables.

Guest Editor(s) will be required to sign a (standard) formal publishing 
agreement with the publishers once a proposal has been accepted by the Editors.

Special issues are managed, on a day to day basis, by the Guest Editor(s), via 
the Scholar One online submission and review system used by JEPP, subject to 
the general guidance (and no doubt help!) of the Editors of JEPP. Normal JEPP 
refereeing procedures (at least two referees per paper) apply.

All special issues are eligible for consideration for publication in book form, 
in the JEPP series published by Routledge.

In case you have any further questions, feel free to get in touch with the 
Editors!

SUBMISSION DATE FOR FIRST HALF OF 2017 (Vol. 24) SPECIAL ISSUE PROPOSALS: 31 
MAY 2015.


--

Prof. Dr. Berthold Rittberger

Chair of International Relations

Department of Political Science

University of Munich

Oettingenstr. 67

80538 Munich, Germany

http://berthold-rittberger.weebly.com



Co-editor (with Jeremy Richardson), Journal of European Public Policy

Visit the journal: http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjpp20/current



JEPP in Google Scholar Metrics: 
http://scholar.google.com/citations?view_op=top_venues&hl=de&vq=soc_politicalscience



Recently published:

Do electoral rules matter? in: European Union Politics (with Jessica 
Fortin-Rittberger)

Conceptualizing and Theorizing EU Regulatory Networks, in: Regulation & 
Governance (with M. Blauberger)


-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"gep-ed" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to