This article relies largely or entirely on a single source .(January 2015) |
Discipline | Sociology |
---|---|
Language | English |
Edited by | Andrej Grubačić |
Publication details | |
History | 1995-present |
Publisher | University Library System, University of Pittsburgh for the Political Economy of the World-System (PEWS) Section of the American Sociological Association (United States) |
Frequency | Biannual |
Yes | |
Standard abbreviations | |
ISO 4 | J. World-Syst. Res. |
Indexing | |
ISSN | 1076-156X |
LCCN | sn94005097 |
OCLC no. | 782887960 |
Links | |
The Journal of World-Systems Research (JWSR) is a biannual, open access, peer-reviewed academic journal in the field of world-systems analysis, established in 1995 by founding editor Christopher Chase-Dunn at the Institute for World-System Research at the University of California at Riverside. [1] As of 2015, it is published by the Political Economy of the World-System (PEWS) Section of the American Sociological Association and by the University Library System, University of Pittsburgh. [2] The journal's current editor-in-chief is Andrej Grubačić.
The journal was one of the first online, peer-reviewed academic journals, published originally as an online archive of scholarly papers accessed using the Gopher (protocol).[ citation needed ]
The journal describes its purpose as being:
to produce a high quality publication of world-systems research articles; to publish quantitative and comparative research on world-systems; to publish works of theory construction and codification of causal propositions; to publish data sets in connection with articles; to publish reviews of books relevant to world-systems studies; and to encourage authors to use the hypermedia advantages of electronic publication to present their research results. [3]
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Academic publishing is the subfield of publishing which distributes academic research and scholarship. Most academic work is published in academic journal articles, books or theses. The part of academic written output that is not formally published but merely printed up or posted on the Internet is often called "grey literature". Most scientific and scholarly journals, and many academic and scholarly books, though not all, are based on some form of peer review or editorial refereeing to qualify texts for publication. Peer review quality and selectivity standards vary greatly from journal to journal, publisher to publisher, and field to field.
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Scholarly peer review or academic peer review is the process of having a draft version of a researcher's methods and findings reviewed by experts in the same field. Peer review is widely used for helping the academic publisher decide whether the work should be accepted, considered acceptable with revisions, or rejected for official publication in an academic journal, a monograph or in the proceedings of an academic conference. If the identities of authors are not revealed to each other, the procedure is called dual-anonymous peer review.
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*{{Official website|https://www.protoolzone.site/2023/05/editing-journal-of-world-systems.html