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1. | The preferred length of manuscripts is between 25 and 30 double-spaced pages (including the reference matter), but longer contributions may also be considered. |
2. | Please use double-spacing throughout your article (including footnotes). Type size should be 10 point using the TimesNewRoman font with citations in the same size, indented and double-spaced. |
3. | The journal generally follows the Chicago Manual of Style. Spelling should follow US English style. |
4. | The manuscript should be word-processed and formatted on US Letter or A4 paper using Microsoft Word. |
5. | The top, bottom, left, and right margins of your manuscript should be one inch each. |
6. | The first page of the manuscript should contain the article title, the names and affiliations of the author(s), authors' notes or acknowledgments, mailing address, e-mail address, and phone and fax numbers. Please also include a copy of curriculum vitae. |
7. | The second page should contain an abstract of no more than 150 words that describes the main points of the article and at least five keywords that will be published following the abstract. |
8. | JIEAS uses an anonymous review process, and contributors should not identify themselves except on the first page of the manuscript. |
9. | Romanization systems for East Asian languages are as follows: Korean (McCune-Reischauer), Chinese (Pinyin), and Japanese (Hepburn). As for Inner Asian languages of Mongolian, Tibetan, Persian, and Turkic, please follow the system used in the Cambridge History of China, volume 6. |
10. | Diacritics in East Asian language romanization systems (i.e., macrons in Japanese and breves in Korean) must be given fully and consistently. As these diacritical marks may not available in the standard font table, a circumflex (?) can be substituted over macron vowels in Japanese and for Korean breves. |
11. | East Asian (Korean, Chinese, and Japanese) characters should appear where necessary in the body of the text or in the footnotes, following the appropriate romanization. Korean characters should be in standard PC or Macintosh encoding, Chinese in standard Big5 encoding (please use traditional-form or fantizi 繁體字), and Japanese kanji in Shift-JIS. The Editors may delete any unnecessary characters. Do not hyphenate your manuscript. |
Citations and Bibliography
12. | The preferred style of reference is parenthetical citation by author and date. For example, (Smith 2000, 80). |
13. | In parenthetical citations, the surname of the author (or authors' surnames connected by "and" if two authors, or the first author's surname followed by "et al." if more than two authors) and year of publication and page numbers should be given, e.g., (Barfield 1989), (Franke and Twitchett 1994, 35-39), (Jeong et al. 1994, 118), or "according to Kim (2001, 112)." |
14. | Where more than one reference is cited, they should be placed with the oldest date first, e.g., (Fletcher 1968, 210; Barfield 1989; Mote 1999, 125). If more than one reference by the same author is cited, the name need not be repeated. For example, (Kim 1983, 1987, 1991; Lee 1995). If more than one author listed in the bibliography has the same surname, the full name should be cited to avoid confusion. For example, (Choe Gwangsik 2004). |
15. | Specific page numbers must be supplied unless one is referring to an entire work. Page numbers follow the publication year and are preceded by a comma and one space. |
16. | Personal communications should give name and date. For example, (Kim, personal communication 1992)." Personal communications should not be listed in the bibliography. |
17. | Footnotes should be kept to an absolute minimum and are reserved for and restricted to only those explications that cannot be readily fit into the narrative text. Footnotes may contain parenthetical citations to other published works, with the full bibliographic entries appearing in the bibliography. |
18. | Footnotes should be numbered sequentially throughout the article. |
19. | Double quotation marks (" ") are used to distinguish words, concepts or short phrases under discussion, to indicate journal article titles, and for short direct quotations that run on in the text. Lengthy direct quotations should be kept to a minimum. |
20. | Quoted text over three lines long should be set off from other text by adding a blank line above and below the section and indenting the block of text on the left. |
21. | Do not include the abbreviations p. and pp. before page numbers. |
22. | Do not use Latin abbreviations such as "ibid.," "op. cit.," "loc. cit.," and "idem," etc. |
23. | When citing Asian-language material in the notes, give the author's name, romanized title (followed by characters if necessary). The title of a book or article must not be substituted by its English translation, but a translation may be given in square brackets. |
24. | A clear system of abbreviations or other critical apparatus should be used for archival and manuscript sources. |
25 | A Bibliography should be placed at the end of the article. |
Examples of Entries in Bibliography
Books:
Duncan, John B. 2000. The Origins of the Chos?n Dynasty. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press.
Edited Books:
Franke, Herbert, and Denis Twitchett, eds. 1994. The Cambridge History of China, vol. 6: Alien Regimes and Border States. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Journal Articles:
Hartwell, Robert. 1982. "Demographic, Political, and Social Transformations of China, 750-1550." Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 42: 365-442.
Section in Edited Book:
Franke, Herbert. 1981. "Tibetans in Yuan China." In John D. Langlois, ed., China under Mongol Rule, 298-328. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Review Articles and Reviews
Review articles and reviews should follow the same guideline as articles. They should be and ten (for review articles) or five double-spaced pages (for reviews) or less in length. Longer reviews may be accepted with the consent of the editorial board. The headings of reviews should contain the following information: title, author, place of publication, publisher, year, number of pages, and price. Possible books for review and correspondence concerning reviews should be sent to the book review editor.
Illustrations and Proofs
Authors are encouraged to submit various illustrations (maps, photographs, etc.) of good quality originals with their manuscripts. Contributions should be submitted in the final version and later corrections can be accepted only with the Editor's discretion. Proofs are sent to both authors and reviewers, and corrections are limited to errors only.
Copyright
The authors should obtain permission to reproduce any copyright material and include appropriate acknowledgements in their manuscript. The authors also agree to assign copyright of their submissions to Koguryo Research Foundation to ensure that the materials in the journal can be distributed as widely as possible. In assigning copyright, authors may use their own material in other publications if the Journal is acknowledged as the original place of publication, and Koguryo Research Foundation is notified in writing in advance.
Submissions
You may submit your manuscript by email and via regular mail. All manuscripts should be submitted to:
Editorial Office
Journal of Inner and East Asian Studies
Koguryo Research Foundation
KERIS B/D 3F, 22-1 Ssangnim-dong, Jung-gu
Seoul 100-400 Republic of Korea
Please submit two copies printed on A4 or Letter size paper along with electronic copy on computer CD or diskette. Electronic submission of manuscripts is also welcome (journal@koguryo.re.kr), but two printed copies must still be submitted.
Books for Review
Please send books for review to
Book Review Editor
Journal of Inner and East Asian Studies
Koguryo Research Foundation
KERIS B/D 3F, 22-1 Ssangnim-dong, Jung-gu
Seoul 100-400 Republic of Korea
Fax: 82-2-2118-1799
Email: journal@koguryo.re.kr
If you have any question, contact us at journal@koguryo.re.kr or 82-2-2118-1781.