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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Cambridge Journal of Economics


Published/Hosted by: Oxford University Press
Print ISSN: 0309-166X
Online ISSN: 1464-3545
Impact Factor: 0.951 (2012)
Country: England

About Journal
The Cambridge Journal of Economics, founded in the traditions of Marx, Keynes, Kalecki, Joan Robinson and Kaldor, welcomes contributions from heterodox economics as well as other social science disciplines. Within this orientation the journal provides a focus for theoretical, applied, interdisciplinary, history of thought and methodological work, with strong emphasis on realistic analysis, the development of critical perspectives, the provision and use of empirical evidence, and the construction of policy. The Editors welcome submissions in this spirit on economic and social issues including, but not only, unemployment, inflation, the organisation of production, the distribution of the social product, class conflict, economic underdevelopment, globalisation and international economic integration, changing forms and boundaries of markets and planning, and uneven development and instability in the world economy.

Submission Process
Submit manuscripts in MS-Word format online at: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/cje

General Guidelines for Authors

All copies must be in Journal style (see a recent issue), double spaced (including footnotes and references). Footnotes should be kept to a minimum, indicated by superscript figures in the text, and collected on a single page placed at the end of the manuscript. Please do not use the automatic footnote feature of your word processing program.
Tables and figures should be attached on separate sheets at the end of the manuscript and their position indicated in the text.
Citations in the text should use the Harvard System of short references (e.g. Isenman, 1980, pp. 66-7; Brown, 1975A, 1993B) with a full alphabetical list at the end in the following style:

Isenman, P. 1980. Basic needs: the case of Sri Lanka, World Development, vol. 8, no. 3 [or page nos if issue number not known]
Myrdal, G. 1939. Monetary Equilibrium, London, Hodge
Phillips, A.W.H. 1953. 'Dynamic Models in Economics', PhD Thesis, University of London

If you use EndNote and/or Reference Manager to facilitate referencing citations (not required for submission), this journal's style is available for use.

For detailed guidelines, click here.