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Writing to Publish Navigating the Academic Journal Review Process.

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Presentation on theme: "Writing to Publish Navigating the Academic Journal Review Process."— Presentation transcript:

1 Writing to Publish Navigating the Academic Journal Review Process

2 The Process Work with a mentor. Pick a journal. – Only one – Fit: general interest vs. subfield speciality – Aim high? Online submission. Waiting – When to contact editor Next stage: rejection; R&R; acceptance Rejection most likely outcome. What to do? – Learn from your reviews. – How quickly send out to another journal? – How deeply to revise?

3 Title and Abstract Title: Get Big – Pick the most expansive title that hasn’t already been taken. Abstract: Get Small – Here, you need to identify exactly what you do, what you show, etc. No frills, all business.

4 Your Introduction Shape expectations. – This starts from word one. – Figures into not just what you say, but how you say it. Highlight your contribution. – Importance of discovery. – The stakes in play. Be wary of the motivating example. End with road map: “This paper proceeds as follows.” Keep it short: ~2 pages; short declarative sentences.

5 Your Literature Review Synthesize literatures, do not summarize articles. – Define literatures, even when participants may not conceive of being a part of one. – Ok to structure discussion either conceptually or temporally. Underscore limitations, problems, failings of existing literatures. – But be generous. These are likely to be your reviewers. By the end of lit review, the author should be primed to see exactly what you have to offer.

6 Theory Should always be a part of the paper, but… You do not need to create altogether new theory. – A purely empirical paper might shed light on something that is at stake theoreticallly.

7 Appendices are your friends… Various types: – Main appendix – Online appendix – For reviewers only Purpose #1: Fortification against potential objections Purpose #2: Long, boring explanations of data collection protocols. Purpose #3: Signaling the seriousness of purpose under which you have engaged your project.

8 Rejection: Moving Forward Deal with it. – Let it sit for at least 3-4 days before doing anything. – Go for a run. What to do? – Argument for the quick turnaround. (rare) – Distinguishing between universal and local complaints. Address former, not latter. (exception is citations) Where to send next?

9 R&R: Memo to Reviewers How to structure. – One reviewer at a time. – One issue at a time. Be maximally responsive, but not maximally obsequious. – Here, you must address both universal and local complaints. Learn from the reviews. – But the trick is to learn the right lesson… How to deal with bone-headed suggestions: – Recognize lack of clarity in writing, and thank them for underscoring the importance of the issue

10 General and Assorted Suggestions Deal with rejection. Grab your reader by the ears. – With tables and prose. – Read Thomas and Turner: Clear and Simple as the Truth Read the journals you intend to publish in. – and cite relevant articles therein!


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