Home
  About Us
  Contact Us
  Search
  News and Events
  People
  Research
  Publications
    Publications by Theme
    Publications by Year
    Local-Global Journal
    Annual Report
  Links
  Academic Programs
  Annual Report









    ISSN 1832-6919

  • Introduction

  • Editors

  • Advisory Board

  • Submission Guidelines and Style-guide



  • Local-Global is a collaborative international journal concerned with the resilience and difficulties of contemporary social life. It draws together groups of researchers and practitioners located in different communities across the world to critically address issues concerning the relationship between the global and the local.

    It emphasises the following social themes and over-arching issues that inform daily life over time and space:

    Authority-Participation
    Belonging-Mobility
    Equality-Wealth Distribution
    Freedom-Obligation
    Identity-Difference
    Inclusion-Exclusion
    Local Knowledges-Expert Systems
    Mediation-Disconnectedness
    Past-Present
    Power-Subjection
    Security-Risk
    Wellbeing-Adversity



    Series Editors
    Martin Mulligan
    Yaso Nadarajah
    Peter Phipps

    Associate Editors
    John Callinan (Hamilton)
    Thangavelu Vasantha Kumaran (Chennai)

    Managing Editor
    Todd Bennet

    General Editor
    Paul James

    Copy Editor and Proofreader
    Pia Smith

    Masthead Design
    Brad Haylock



    INTERNATIONAL ADVISORY BOARD

    Professor Perry Anderson, (University of California)
    Dr Alan Chun, (Academica Sinica)
    Professor Jonathan Friedman, (Ecoles des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Social)
    Emeritus Professor Jack Goody (Cambridge University)
    Professor Krishan Kumar (University of Virginia)
    Professor David Lyon (Queens University)
    Professor Walter Mignolo (Duke University)
    Professor Juliet Mitchell (Cambridge University)
    Ashis Nandy, (Centre for the Study of Developing Societies)
    Professor Brendan O’Leary (University of Pennsylvania)
    Professor Fazal Rizvi (University of Illinois)
    Professor Jan Aart Scholte (University of Warwick)
    Professor Peter Sellers (University of California)
    Professor Manfred Steger (RMIT University and University of Hawai’i)
    Professor Jukka Siikala (University of Helsinki)
    Professor Gayatri Spivak (Columbia University)



























































    Submission Guidelines

    Local–Global welcomes contributions from interested authors and researchers. Authors should consult the style-guide below. Authors wishing to submit articles to be considered for publication in Local-Global should please email contributions as a Microsoft Word file to globalism@rmit.edu.au. Papers in the 'Research Papers' section of Local–Global are academically refereed articles. Manuscripts are read initially by the editors. If considered to fall within the journal's brief, the manuscript is forwarded to two referees who conduct a blind review. Referee's comments are forwarded to the author, and the editors determine whether the article has been adequately corrected or adjusted for publication. The editors reserve the right to alter the normal refereeing process in exceptional circumstances.


    Manuscripts should be sent in Microsoft Word, RTF, or WordPerfect format, and be between 4500 and 6000 words in length. A short abstract of the article and author contact details should be supplied as well.


    Articles should use no more than two levels of heading. The use of bullet-points, or other forms of point listing, is discouraged in favour of a discursive statement of ideas the author wishes to convey.


    Authors are requested to keep to an absolute minimum the styling and formatting functions of the word processing software they use. If figures or diagrams are to be included in the article, they should be sent as separate attachments in 'gif', 'jpg' or 'png' format. If the article includes tables, these should be constructed using the table-building functions available in most word processing software, rather than being constructed manually.


    Style-Guide

    Download these instructions as a pdf

    Background

    In general, in editing documents the Globalism Institute follows the Australian Government Publishing Service Style Manual (latest edition) on questions covered in 'Part One' of that manual: for example, capitals, italics, and punctuation. There is no special need to familiarize yourself with the minute details of that style, but the following variations are worth noting.

    Spelling

    Use first spellings as listed in the Oxford Dictionary (in particular, the Australian Concise Oxford Dictionary). In particular, note the following:

  • the use of 'z': e.g. 'organize' and 'globalization' rather than 's' in suffixes;


  • the use of the suffix 'our' rather than 'or' as in 'labour' not 'labor' (except where referring to a formal name with a specific spelling such as the 'Labour Party'; co-operation not cooperation.


  • Exceptions include, 'program' not 'programme'

    Conventions

  • Spell out numbers to one-hundred, thereafter in numerals.


  • … except for

  • round numbers such as a thousand or ten million when the written form is shorter.


  • percentages: e.g., 47 per cent; not 47 %.


  • Use BCE and CE (no stops and in small capitals) rather than BC and AD.


  • Dates in the form 'day month year', for example, '8 May 1958' except for colloquial phrases such as '9-11' or 'September 11'.


  • Referencing

    Consistency in this area is perhaps the most important given how much editing time it takes to change from other styles. All textual notes and references are to be integrated sequentially into the endnote or footnote system.

    Examples:

    Damian Grenfell and Anna Trembath, 'A Spectre Haunting the Refugee Movement?', Arena Magazine, no. 68, 2003, p. 21.

    Zygmunt Bauman, 'Wars of the Globalization Era', European Journal of Social Theory, vol. 4, no. 1, 2001, pp. 11-28.

    Tom Nairn, 'The Curse of Rurality: Limits of Modernisation Theory', in John A. Hall, ed., The State of the Nation: Essays on Ernest Gellner, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1998.

    Michel Foucault, The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences, Routledge, London (translated 1970), 1991.

    Christopher Ziguras, Self-Care: Embodiment, Personal Autonomy and the Shaping of Health Consciousness, Routledge, London, 2004.

    Note the order of publication details (with periodicals discussed in brackets):

  • author's first name, and initials if used


  • author's surname


  • title of publication, essay in collection or book, ('Title of Article')


  • name of collection editor and title of collection, if applicable (title of journal in italics)


  • volume number in Arabic, e.g. Vol. 1 if in the title of a book (or volume and numbers: e.g., vol. 1. no. 4 in the case of a journal)


  • edition (edn), if applicable (spring, summer, etc.), but not if already using the 'vol., no.' system in which case convert 'spring' to no. 1, winter to 'no. 2', etc.


  • publisher


  • place of publication - this means city of publication


  • date of publication


  • page number or page numbers, applicable in the case of articles only, or for specific reference, in the form of 'p. x' or pp. x-y. (Note the spaces and the use of the en-dash rather than a hyphen between pages numbers. Note also that the second number in a sequence is abbreviated: e.g. 'pp. 25-6' or 'pp. 320-35').


  • N.B. the following particularities:

  • use the author's full name as it appears in the text cited, including middle initials if applicable.


  • the publisher's name appears before the place of publication appears.


  • the use of 'ed.', 'eds', '2nd edn', 'vol.', 'no.' as the accepted abbreviations


  • * all these details to be punctuated by commas only

    Use author's name and short title for second and subsequent references to the same book or article. Use 'Ibid.' for a cited text that has been cited in the immediately-preceding footnote.

    Textual forms

  • em dash: x—x , that is, without spaces


  • ellipses: x … x, that is, with spaces


  • use single quotation marks 'as the entry into a quote and then double quotation marks "within those marks" for citations within the quoted material'.


  • subheading: (level 2)


  • Bold, Capitalized

  • sub-subheading: (level 3)


  • Italic, nonbold, capitalized only on the first word: And the first word after a colon, with no space between the heading and the following text.

  • indent quotes of over 40 words


  • Word list including accents

    Always include accents on words where the script form is available:

    al-Qa'ida (except where in inverted commas or as quoted from somewhere else)

    Examples: Jürgen Habermas; Lévi-Strauss, Claude; Qur'an

    Globalism Institute©Copyright 2005-2007