Få din forskning publiceret
Jan 2007 Getting my research into journals
Faculty
Keld Laursen and Peter Maskell
Course Coordinator
Professor Peter Maskell, CBS
Aim of the course
Continuous publishing in academic journals has increasingly become not only a criterion for initial employment, subsequent tenure, and possible promotion, but also a necessity for most academics employed by universities and business schools. This workshop is intended to deal with the basic issues of the process of publishing in the learned journals and will address questions such as: How to choose a journal? What constitutes a valuable contribution? In what style should it be written? How do I address an editor? What do the reviewers look for? At the end of the workshop, students will be familiar with the requirements for publishing articles in various types of outlets in management and related fields.
Course content
* What is a good scientific contribution: Some criteria and examples.
* Developing a publication project.
* Publishing strategies.
* The pros and cons of publishing in edited volumes contra in journals.
* Co-authorship, acknowledgements, credit-management
* How to deal with reviews and reviewers.
* Web tools: Assessing journals and authors using ISI Web of Knowledge
* Editors' Round-Table
Lecture plan
Time/period Faculty Title
23 - 24 January 2007 Economics Getting my Research into journals
Course literature
Journal of Management Studies Guidelines for Authors
Industrial and Corporate Change Guidelines for Authors
Regional Studies Guidelines for Authors
Harvard Business Review Guidelines for Authors.
Huff, A.S. (1999): Writing for Scholarly Publication, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Cummings, L.L. and Frost, P.J. (1985) Publishing in the Organization Sciences, Homewood, Illinois: Irwin.
Floyd, S.W., Schroeder, D.M., Finn, D.M. (1994): "Only if I'm first author: Conflict over credit in management scholarship", Academy of Management Journal, 37(3): 734-747.
Phelan, S.E., Ferreira, M. and Salvador, R.(2002): “The first twenty years of the Strategic Management Journal,” Strategic Management Journal, 23(12): 1161-1168.
Starbuck, William H (2003): “Turning lemons into lemonade: Where is the value in peer reviews?” Journal of Management Inquiry, 12(4): 344-351
Whetten, D.A. (1989): "What constitutes a theoretical contribution?", Academy of Management Review, 14(4): 490-495
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