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期刊名称:SOCIAL HISTORY OF MEDICINE

ISSN:0951-631X
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Tri-annual
出版社:OXFORD UNIV PRESS, GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD, ENGLAND, OX2 6DP
  出版社网址:http://www.oup.co.uk/
期刊网址:http://www3.oup.co.uk/sochis/
影响因子:0.431(2008)
主题范畴:HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

 

Social History of Medicine is concerned with all aspects of health, illness, and medical treatment in the past. It is committed to publishing work on the social history of medicine from a variety of disciplines. The journal offers its readers substantive and lively articles on a variety of themes, critical assessments of archives and sources, conference reports, up-to-date information on research in progress, a discussion point on topics of current controversy and concern, review articles, and wide-ranging book reviews.

Impact Factor

In the 2003 ISI Journal Citation Reports, the impact factor for Social History of Medicine is= 0.556 (Rank= 7/26)

Abstracting and Indexing Services

Social History of Medicine is covered by the following abstracting/indexing services:

ABC CLIO - America: History and Life
CSA Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
English Historical Review
Historical Abstracts
IBZ (International Bibliography of Periodical Literature
IBR (International Bibliography of Book Reviews
International Medieval Bibliography
ISI: Research Alert, Current Contents
Medline/Index Medicus - History of Medicine
Periodicals Contents Index
PsycInfo (American Psychological Association)
Sociological Abstracts
Wise for Medicine

 


Instructions to Authors

 

These notes indicate the main literary and typographical conventions of Social History of Medicine. All corrections and alterations to contributions at proof stage (apart from the correction of misprints) are extremely expensive, and may be charged to authors. It is essential, therefore, that authors should ensure that their typescripts, once accepted for publication, are in all respects ready to go to press. Typescripts will normally be returned to authors on acceptance, and must be altered to conform to these rules; at the same time, authors should make a final check for content, style, proper names, quotations, and references to sources.

  1. Submission of typescripts. Six copies of each typescript should be sent to Roger Davidson or Helen King, together with the originals and six copies of any statistical tables, maps, and diagrams, and a statement of the article's word length, including footnotes. Authors are encouraged to submit final versions of articles on word-processor disks; these can be used in the typesetting process. Authors proposing to use illustrative material are asked to consult with the Editors before submitting it. A more detailed set of instructions for authors can be obtained from the Editors. Neither the Editors (on behalf of the Society for the Social History of Medicine) nor the publisher accept responsibility for the views of authors as presented in their contributions. Authors are requested not to submit typescripts that are under consideration for publication elsewhere. The Editors hope within twelve weeks of receiving a manuscript to provide authors with a decision on whether it will be accepted for publication. Authors whose work is accepted will be expected to correct proofs of their own article, and will be asked to confirm the article's originality.
  2. Preparation of manuscript. All papers must be typed or letter-quality printed, double-spaced on A4 paper with ample margins and generally not more than 8,000 words (including footnotes) in length. Longer manuscripts will not normally be accepted for publication unless appropriate cuts are undertaken by the author. Each page of the typescript should be numbered. The title of the article and the author's name should be provided on a separate sheet. A statement of the author's present position and an address sufficient for her/him to be contacted by readers should be provided on a separate sheet, together with telephone and fax numbers and an e-mail address if available. An abstract of the article containing a maximum of 200 words and no more than ten keywords should be supplied on a separate page.
  3. Style and Presentation. Quotation marks should be single and not double unless they indicate a quotation within a quotation. Indent quotations of over 50 words (without quotation marks). All figures up to and including ten should be given as words, all above ten in numbers, except where a series is given. Thus '8 sheep, 12 horses and 36 goats'. Use 'eighteenth century' not '18th century'. Use '1930s' not '1930's'. 'Per annum' and 'per cent' should be used in text and notes. Use 1852-72, not 1852-1872. In general, when referring to numbers in sequence, use the shortest form: thus 20-6, 101-7, 151-7; note exceptions, 10-13, 11-17. Authors should print out their work in one font only and in a uniform font size. Print facilities such as bold should be avoided.
  4. Footnotes. These should be double-spaced and numbered consecutively throughout the article. They should not be typed at the foot of each page but typed separately from the text at the end of the article. (It should be noted that in the published version they will appear at the bottom of the relevant page.) Footnotes should contain, as far as possible, necessary references rather than additional explanations. Acknowledgements should appear as footnote 1 to the title or the first sentence.
  5. Tables and diagrams. Tables should be comprehensible without reference to the text. Each must be typed without vertical ruled lines, on a separate sheet and its approximate position in the text indicated by a marginal note. Graphs and diagrams should be on a separate sheet each bearing the author's name, short title of paper and figure number on the back and packed flat. Check tables carefully both for their contents and their final form. Sources for tables should be given in full detail, even if elsewhere referred to in footnotes in the text of the article. It is permitted to use p.a. and % in tables, though not in the text or footnotes.
  6. Graphs and maps. These should be drawn by a professional draughtsman or produced by computer graphics. It is particularly important that graphs and maps should be checked carefully for their content and final form.
  7. References. References are confined to footnotes. The following points should be noted. Ensure that a full reference is given when citing a work for the first time. Authors' and editors' first names should be designated by initials only. All titles should be capitalized. Book and journal titles should be italicized. Place and date of publication must be given for all books. When referring to specific pages in a book or article in order to identify an argument or quotation use 'pp.' followed by the appropriate numbers: when indicating the location of an article in a journal or chapter in an edited collection provide the page numbers only. Some examples are given below.

a.      Books: (Note that volume numbers in a series should be in upper-case roman numerals)
D. Dwork, War is Good for Babies and Other Young Children: A History of the Infant Welfare Movement in England, 1898–1918 (London, 1986).

P. J. Weindling (ed.), The Social History of Occupational Health (London, 1985).

R. H. Tawney and E. E. Power (eds.), Tudor Economic Documents, 3 vols., vol. I (London, 1953).

Where a chapter from a collective work is cited, or where a volume is one of a series, give the editor(s) of the individual volume in the precise form which follows:
D. J. Kevles, 'Genetics in the United States and Great Britain, 1890–1930: A Review with Speculations', in C. Webster (ed.), Biology, Medicine and Society, 1840–1940 (Cambridge, 1981), 193-216.

D. V. Glass, 'World Population, 1800–1950', in H. J. Habakkuk and M. M. Postan (eds.), Cambridge Economic History of Europe, VI, Pt. 1, The Industrial Revolution and After (Cambridge, 1965), 60-138.

b.      Articles: Note the sequence of volume number, year of publication, and page references.
D. Thompson, 'The Decline of Social Welfare: Falling State Support for the Elderly since Early Victorian Times', Ageing and Society, 4 (1984), 451-82.

A. Digby, 'Changes in the Asylum: The Case of York, 1777–1815', Economic History Review, 2nd ser. XXXVI (1983), 218-39.

c.      Official papers: British Parliamentary Papers are always abbreviated as P.P. Give full title, year of publication, volume number. Thus:
Papers relating to the Sanitary State of the People of England (P.P., 1857–58, XXIII).

d.      Theses:
D. E. Watkins, 'The English Revolution in Social Medicine' (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of London, 1984).

Second and subsequent citations: In the footnotes, books, articles, theses and official publications should, in second and subsequent citations, be referred to in abbreviated form, with the precise page reference if applicable. If the work is cited in more than one consecutive footnote, use 'ibid.', unless the previous note contains more than one source. When more than one work by the same author is cited in a footnote, use 'idem'. 'Op cit.' and 'loc. cit.' should not be used. For example:

Dwork, War is Good for Babies, pp.78–9; Kevles, 'Genetics in the United States', pp. 194–5; Digby, 'Changes in the Asylum', pp. 220–1.

 


Editorial Board

 

Editors:
Dr Waltraud Ernst
Department of History
University of Southampton
Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK

Email: wer@soton.ac.uk

Dr Roger Davidson
Economic and Social History
School of History and Classics
University of Edinburgh
William Robertson Building
50 George Square
Edinburgh EH8 9JY, UK

Email: roger.davidson@ed.ac.uk

Reviews Editor:
Dr Louise Hill Curth
University of Exeter
Department of History
Amory Building
Rennes Drive
Exeter EX4 4RJ

Email: l.curth@exeter.ac.uk


Gazette Editor:
Carsten Timmermann
CHSTM
The University
Maths Tower
Oxford Road
Manchester M13 1PL

Assistant Editor:
Ruth Biddiss
Department of Classics
School of Humanities
University of Reading
Whiteknights
PO Box 218
Reading RG6 6AA

Editorial Board:
Peter Biller, UK
Anne Borsay, UK
Jane Buckingham, New Zealand
Marcos Cueto, Peru
Wolfgang Eckart, Germany
Mark Harrison, UK
Elizabeth van Heyningen, South Africa
Peregrine Horden, UK
Susan Lederer, USA
Mary Lindemann, USA
Lenore Manderson, Australia
Angus Mclaren, Canada
Michael McVaugh, USA
Jo Melling, UK
Lion Murard, CERMES, France
Esteban Rodriguez Ocana, Spain
Emilie Savage-Smith, UK
Philippa Mein Smith, New Zealand
Akihito Suzuki, Japan
John Harley Warner, USA
David Wright, Canada

 



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