Journal of South Asian Development
The Journal of South Asian Development is a refereed multi-disciplinary social science journal bringing out three issues per year. JSAD publishes original research articles, book reviews and scholarly commentary relating to all facets of development in South Asia.
The journal carries empirical studies as well as theoretical and conceptual articles covering contemporary development issues in the region, from diverse disciplinary perspectives including economics, political science, sociology, socio-cultural anthropology, as well as interdisciplinary areas such as development studies, gender studies and migration studies. Geographically, JSAD covers the seven states of South Asia (India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan and the Maldives) plus Afghanistan.
Electronic Access:
Journal of South Asian Development is available electronically on Sage Journals Online at http://journals.sagepub.com/home/SAD.
This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).Submit your manuscript today at https://peerreview.sagepub.com/jsad
The Journal of South Asian Development (JSAD) is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes papers based on original research pertaining to any aspect of development in the South Asian region (comprising of Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan and the Maldives, as well as Afghanistan). We invite papers focusing on the economic, social or political dimensions of development in South Asia. We welcome a diversity of theoretical and disciplinary perspectives, analytical frameworks and methodological approaches, and value interdisciplinary and comparative research. JSAD engages a wide readership across the social sciences, both in South Asia and globally, including researchers, practitioners, policymakers, the media and others.
Contributions are welcomed from economists, sociologists, political scientists, social geographers, development studies scholars, and other social scientists committed to the study and analysis of development issues in the South Asia region. Within this broad field, we are particularly interested in receiving research articles on:
- economic growth, institutions, state capacity, structural reforms, structural transformation, factors of growth, firms, households
- business cycle fluctuations, stabilisation policies – monetary, fiscal, financial
- open economy macroeconomics, international trade
- governance: public policy, civil society, social protection and welfare
- political economy and ecology of development: environment, climate change, dispossession, displacement, social and environmental justice
- poverty and inequality: marginalization, social mobility, health, nutrition, food security
- labour and education: skill development, employment, informality, migration
- information, communication and digital technologies (ICDTs) and development
- development theory, policy and practice
| Indraneel Dasgupta | Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata |
| Kenneth Bo Nielsen | University of Oslo, Norway |
| Rajeswari Sengupta | Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research (IGIDR), Mumbai, India |
| Carol Upadhya | National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bengaluru, India |
| Lipika Kamra | Queen Mary University of London, UK |
| Aniket Aga | Department of Geography, University at Buffalo, USA |
| Anirban Mitra | University of Kent, UK |
| Rudrani Bhattacharya | National Institute of Public Finance and Policy (NIPFP), India |
| Tanika Chakraborty | Indian Institute Of Management–Calcutta, India |
| Soumyananda Dinda | The University of Burdwan, India |
| Kathinka Fossum Evertsen | Institute for Social Research, Oslo, Norway |
| Amanda Gilbertson | University of Melbourne, Australia |
| Rozana Himaz | University College, London, UK |
| Nida Kirmani | School of Humanities and Social Sciences, LUMS |
| Kanika Mahajan | Ashoka University, Haryana, India |
| Vidya Mahambare | Great Lakes Institute of Management, India |
| Rajesh Raj Natarajan | Associate Professor in Economics, Sikkim University, India |
| Patrik Oskarsson | Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden |
| Anuradha Patnaik | Mumbai School of Economics and Public Policy, India |
| Selim Raihan | University of Dhaka, Bangladesh |
| Anirudh Shingal | S.P. Jain Institute of Management & Research (SPJIMR), Mumbai, India |
| Aardra Surendran | IIT Hyderabad, India |
| Raphael Susewind | King's College, London, UK |
| Bina Agarwal | University of Manchester, UK |
| Amita Baviskar | Ashoka University, India |
| Sonalde Desai | University of Maryland, USA |
| Rajat Ganguly | Murdoch University, Australia |
| Katy Gardner | London School of Economics and Political Science, UK |
| Barbara Harriss-White | Oxford University, UK |
| Vegard Iversen | University of Greenwich, UK |
| Ravi Kanbur | Cornell University, USA |
| Sabyasachi Kar | Institute of Economic Growth, University of Delhi, India |
| Khalid Nadvi | University of Manchester, UK |
| Geert De Neve | University of Sussex, UK |
| Kunal Sen | UNU-WIDER, Finland |
| Arjan Verschoor | University of East Anglia, UK |
| Dushni Weerakoon | Institute of Policy Studies, Sri Lanka |
| Andrew Wyatt | University of Bristol, UK |
Submission Guidelines for Journal of South Asian Development
Journal of South Asian Development is hosted on SAGE Peer Review; a web based online submission and peer review system. Please read the Manuscript Submission guidelines below, and then visit https://peerreview.sagepub.com/jsad to login and submit your article online.
The JSAD is a peer-reviewed journal and follows a two-step review process. All papers submitted to the JSAD are first scrutinized by the editors to determine suitability. Papers found to be suitable are then assessed by peer referees using a double-blind review process. The JSAD strives to provide authors with a publication decision within three months of submission of their papers.
Authors will be provided with a copyright form once the contribution is accepted for publication. The submission will be considered as final only after the filled-in and signed copyright form is received. In case there are two or more authors, the corresponding author needs to sign the copyright form.
The corresponding author will receive a link for the copyright form once a contribution is accepted for publication. The submission will be considered as final once the author submits the copyright form.
Papers should be between 8,000 and 12,000 words in length and ideally combine theory with empirical analysis. Papers may focus on a particular state, a group of states or the entire South Asian region. Papers that compare South Asian states or the region with other states and regions are also welcome.
All articles must be accompanied by an abstract of 200 words, approximately five keywords, and full institutional affiliation, postal and email addresses and brief profile of the author/s. In case there are two or more authors, then corresponding author’s name and address details must be clearly specified on the first page itself. Papers submitted to JSAD must not be under consideration by any other publisher; authors must attest to this at the time of submission. It is also the author’s responsibility to disclose any potential conflict of interest regarding the submitted manuscript.
The JSAD also publishes reviews of books on all aspects of development in South Asia. Individual authors or publishers interested in having their books reviewed in the JSAD should send books to Keerty Nakray, Book Review Editor, Journal of South Asian Development, at the Jindal Global Law School, India. Keerty Nakray can be contacted by email at jsadbookreview@gmail.com.
Manuscript Formatting
1. The manuscript should be submitted in MS Word format.
2. All articles should be typed on one side of the paper (preferably A4) and double-spaced throughout (not only the text but also displayed quotations, notes, references and any other matter).
3. Notes should be numbered serially and presented at the end of the article. Notes must contain more than a mere reference.
4. British spellings be used throughout; universal ‘z’ in ‘-ize’ and ‘-ization’ words.
5. Use single quotes throughout. Double quotes only used within single quotes. Spellings of words in quotations should not be changed. Quotations of 45 words or more should be separated from the text and indented with one space with a line space above and below. When directly quoting from a work, include the page number in the citation.
6. Spell out numbers from one to nine, 10 and above to remain in figures. However, for exact measurements use only figures (3 km, 9 per cent not %). Use international number system (i.e., thousands, millions, billions, etc.).
7. When referring to a century use words, e.g., ‘twentieth century’ and when reference is being made to a decade use numbers, e.g., ‘1980s’.
8. Permissions and Releases: Material taken directly from a copyrighted source should be clearly identified, and the copyright holder’s written permission to reproduce it must be submitted in a separate file. Obtaining permission to reproduce copyrighted material is the author’s responsibility, as is payment of any fees the copyright holder may request.
9. Tables and figures to be indicated by number (e.g., see Table 1), not by placement (e.g., see Table below). Short and crisp titles and headings in tables and figures are preferred. The units of measurement should be stated and the sources must be cited at the foot of the table. Present each table and figure on a separate sheet of paper, gathering them together at the end of article.
10. All photographs and scanned images should have a resolution of minimum 300 dpi and 1500 pixels and their format should be TIFF or JPEG. Due permissions should be taken for copyright protected photographs/images. Even for photographs/images available in the public domain, it should be clearly ascertained whether or not their reproduction requires permission for purposes of publishing (which is a profit-making endeavor). All photographs/scanned images should be provided separately.
11. A consolidated listing of all books, articles, essays, theses and documents referred to (including any referred to in the tables, graphs and maps) should be provided at the end of the article.
· Arrangement of references: Reference list entries should be alphabetized by the last name of the first author of each work. In each reference, authors’ names are inverted (last name first) for all authors (first, second or subsequent ones); give the last name and initials for all authors of a particular work unless the work has more than six authors. If the work has more than six authors, list the first six authors and then use et al. after the sixth author’s name.
· Chronological listing: If more than one work by the same author(s) is cited, they should be listed in order by the year of publication, starting with the earliest.
· Sentence case: In references, sentence case (only the first word and any proper noun are capitalized – e.g., ‘The software industry in India’) is to be followed for the titles of papers, books, articles, etc.
· Title case: In references, Journal titles are put in title case (first letter of all words except articles and conjunctions are capitalized – e.g., Journal of Business Ethics).
· Italicize: Book and Journal titles are to be italicized.
12. Citations and References should adhere to the guidelines below (based on the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 6th edition). Some examples are given below:
In text citations:
· One work by one author: (Kessler, 2003, p. 50) or ‘Kessler (2003) found that among the epidemiological samples..’.
· One work by two authors: (Joreskog & Sorborn, 2007, pp. 50–66) or Joreskog and Sorborn (2007) found that..
· One work by three or more authors: (Basu, Banerji & Chatterjee, 2007) [first instance]; Basu et al. (2007) [Second instance onwards].
· Groups or organizations or universities: (University of Pittsburgh, 2007) or University of Pittsburgh (2007).
· Authors with same surname: Include the initials in all the in-text citations even if the year of publication differs, e.g., (I. Light, 2006; M.A. Light, 2008).
· Works with no identified author or anonymous author: Cite the first few words of the reference entry (title) and then the year, e.g., (‘Study finds’, 2007); (Anonymous, 1998).
If abbreviations are provided, then the style to be followed is: (National Institute of Mental Health [NIMH], 2003) in the first citation and (NIMH, 2003) in subsequent citations.
· Two or more works by same author: (Gogel, 1990, 2006, in press)
· Two or more works with different authors: (Gogel, 1996; Miller, 1999)
· Secondary sources: Allport's diary (as cited in Nicholson, 2003).
References:
· Books:
Patnaik, Utsa (2007). The republic of hunger. New Delhi: Three Essays Collective.
· Edited Books:
Amanor, Kojo S., & Moyo, S. (Eds) (2008). Land and sustainable development in Africa. London and New York: Zed Books.
· Translated books:
Amin, S. (1976). Unequal development (trans. B. Pearce). London and New York: Monthly Review Press.
· Book chapters:
Chachra, S. (2011). The national question in India. In S. Moyo and P. Yeros (Eds), Reclaiming the nation (pp. 67–78). London and New York: Pluto Press.
· Journal articles:
Foster, J.B. (2010). The financialization of accumulation. Monthly Review, 62(5), 1-17. doi: 10.1037/0278-6133.24.2.225 [DOI number optional]
· Newsletter article, no author:
Six sites meet for comprehensive anti-gang intiative conference. (2006, November/December). OOJDP News @ a Glance. Retrieved from http://www.ncrjs.gov/html
[Please do not place a period at the end of an online reference.]
· Newspaper article:
Schwartz, J. (1993, September 30). Obesity affects economic, social status. The Washington Post, pp. A1, A4.
· In-press article:
Briscoe, R. (in press). Egocentric spatial representation in action and perception. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. Retrieved from http://cogprints.org/5780/1/ECSRAP.F07.pdf
· Non-English reference book, title translated into English:
Real Academia Espanola. (2001). Diccionario de la lengua espanola [Dictionary of the Spanish Language] (22nd ed.). Madrid, Spain: Author.
· Special issue or section in a journal:
Haney, C., & Wiener, R.L. (Eds) (2004). Capital punishment in the United States [Special Issue]. Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 10(4), 1-17.