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Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics

Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics


eISSN: 23215305 | ISSN: 02601079 | Current volume: 37 | Current issue: 2 Frequency: Bi-annually

The Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics is a peer-reviewed journal publishing since 1985.

The explosion of information and research that has taken place in recent years has had a profound effect upon a variety of existing academic disciplines giving rise to the dissolution of barriers between some, mergers between others and the creation of entirely new fields of enquiry. The social sciences have not been immune to the effects of this transformation, but a great deal of relevant information that has been discovered in related fields of study, inter alia, sociology, psychology, history and anthropology, still has yet to be fully incorporated into the central body of economic doctrines traditionally taught in colleges and universities. Economics, as a result, has been shielded from exciting developments that have occurred in the physical sciences, philosophy, technology and mathematics.

The journal gives priority to publishing articles that bring insights from other disciplines into economics as well as those that link ideas from different branches of economics in an innovative way. Papers and comments are particularly welcome on topics that focus, from an interdisciplinary perspective, on neglected boundary areas, hidden assumptions and axioms in economics that may not be self-evident. The aim is to contribute towards the development of an economic science more appropriate to the contemporary global environment, thereby enabling economists to tackle problems that have been created within that environment.

The advisory board of the journal includes a number of distinguished scholars who have fruitfully straddled disciplinary boundaries in their academic research.

This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).

Submit your manuscript today at https://peerreview.sagepub.com/jie

The Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics is a peer-reviewed journal publishing since 1985.

The explosion of information and research that has taken place in recent years has had a profound effect upon a variety of existing academic disciplines giving rise to the dissolution of barriers between some, mergers between others and the creation of entirely new fields of enquiry. The social sciences have not been immune to the effects of this transformation, but a great deal of relevant information that has been discovered in related fields of study, inter alia, sociology, psychology, history and anthropology, still has yet to be fully incorporated into the central body of economic doctrines traditionally taught in colleges and universities. Economics, as a result, has been shielded from exciting developments that have occurred in the physical sciences, philosophy, technology and mathematics.

The Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics follows a double-blind peer review policy. The journal straddles disciplinary boundaries to enhance our understanding of economic issues, both theoretical and empirical. It gives priority to publishing articles that bring insights from other disciplines into economics as well as those that link ideas from different branches of economics in an innovative way. Papers and comments are particularly welcome on topics that focus, from an interdisciplinary perspective, on neglected boundary areas, hidden assumptions and axioms in economics that may not be self-evident.

The aim is to contribute towards the development of an economic science more appropriate to the contemporary global environment, thereby enabling economists to tackle problems that have been created within that environment.

The advisory board of the journal includes a number of distinguished scholars who have fruitfully straddled disciplinary boundaries in their academic research.

Editor
Prabir Bhattacharya School of Social Sciences, Heriot-Watt University, UK
International Advisory Board
Basudeb Chaudhuri University of Caen, France
Geoff Harris Department of Public Management & Economics, Durban University of Technology, South Africa
Xiaoxia Huang University of Science and Technology Beijing, China
Timur Kuran Duke University, USA
Alan Martina ANU College of Business and Economics, The Australian National University, Australia
Jonathan Michie Kellogg College, University of Oxford, UK
Dilip Nachane Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research, Mumbai, India
Yasushi Nakamura Yokohama National University, Japan
Riccardo Natoli School of Accounting and Finance, University of Victoria, Canada
Anthony Ogus School of Law, Manchester University UK
Ananya Mukherjee Reed Department of Political Science, York University, Canada
Tirthankar Roy London School of Economics & Political Science, UK. Managing Editor
Jayati Sarkar Indira Gandhi Institute for Development Research, Mumbai, India
Takahiro Sato RIEB, Kobe University, Japan
Hans-Bernd Schäfer Bucerius Law School, Germany
Christophe Schinckus University of the Fraser Valley, Canada
  • ABDC: Journal Quality List
  • CABS: Academic Journal Guide (AJG)
  • DeepDyve
  • Indian Citation Index (ICI)
  • J-Gate
  • OCLC
  • Research Papers in Economics (RePEc)
  • SCOPUS
  • Sociological Abstracts - ProQuest
  • Web of Science: Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
  • Worldwide Political Science Abstracts - ProQuest
  • The Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics 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/jie to login and submit your article online.

    1. All editorial correspondence should be addressed to jie@sagepub.in

    2. Articles submitted to JIE should be original unpublished work and should not be under consideration for publication anywhere else.

    3. 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.

    4. Please submit a blinded text file for your manuscript. Articles should be written in MS Word, Times New Roman font, and should be electronically submitted at https://peerreview.sagepub.com/jie. Accepted manuscripts (including footnotes and references) should normally not exceed 8,000 words but this limit may be relaxed to a maximum of 10,000 words in exceptional cases such as for literature surveys.

    5. Articles should be submitted with a separate title page bearing only the title of the article, author/s’ names, designations, official addresses, phone/fax numbers, and email addresses. Author/s’ name should not appear on any other page. In case there are two or more authors, then corresponding author’s name and address details must be clearly specified on the title page.

    6. All articles must be accompanied by an abstract of 150–200 words, 4–6 keywords, and the Journal of Economic Literature classification codes (refer to www.aeaweb.org/journal/jel_class_system.html).

    7. Use British spellings in all cases rather than American spellings (hence, ‘programme’ not ‘program’, ‘labour’ not ‘labor’, and ‘centre’ and not ‘center’).

    8. Use ‘z’ spellings instead of ‘s’ spellings. This means that words ending with ‘-ise’, ‘isation’, etc., will be spelt with ‘z’ (e.g., ‘recognize’, ‘organize’, ‘civilize’).

    9. Use single quotes throughout. Double quotes only to be 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.

    10. Notes should be numbered serially and presented at the end of the article. Notes must contain more than a mere reference.

    11. Use ‘twentieth century’, ‘1980s’. 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 thousands and millions, not lakhs and crores.

    12. Use of italics and diacriticals should be minimized, but used consistently.

    13. Tables and figures to be indicated by numbers separately (see Table 1), not by placement (see Table below). Present each table and figure on a separate page, gathering them together at the end of the article. All figures and tables should be cited in the text. Sources for figures and tables should be mentioned irrespective of whether or not they require permissions.

    14. 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 uploaded separately.

    15. 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, after Endnotes.

    · 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.

    16. 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

    · 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

    [Please do not place a period at the end of an online reference.]

    · 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.

    17. Book reviews must have details like name of author/editor and book reviewed, place of publication and publisher, year of publication, number of pages and price.

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