Journal of World-Systems Research

Academic journal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Journal of World-Systems Research (JWSR) is a biannual, open access, peer-reviewed academic journal in the field of world-systems analysis, established in 1995 by founding editor Christopher Chase-Dunn at the Institute for World-System Research at the University of California at Riverside.[1] As of 2015, it is published by the Political Economy of the World-System (PEWS) Section of the American Sociological Association and by the University Library System, University of Pittsburgh.[2] The journal's current editor-in-chief is Andrej Grubačić.[3]

DisciplineSociology
LanguageEnglish
History1995-present
Quick facts Discipline, Language ...
Journal of World-Systems Research
DisciplineSociology
LanguageEnglish
Edited byAndrej Grubačić
Publication details
History1995-present
Publisher
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh for the Political Economy of the World-System (PEWS) Section of the American Sociological Association (United States)
FrequencyBiannual
Yes
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4J. World-Syst. Res.
Indexing
ISSN1076-156X
LCCNsn94005097
OCLC no.782887960
Links
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The journal was one of the first online, peer-reviewed academic journals, published originally as an online archive of scholarly papers accessed using the Gopher (protocol).[citation needed]

The journal describes its purpose as being:

to produce a high quality publication of world-systems research articles; to publish quantitative and comparative research on world-systems; to publish works of theory construction and codification of causal propositions; to publish data sets in connection with articles; to publish reviews of books relevant to world-systems studies; and to encourage authors to use the hypermedia advantages of electronic publication to present their research results.[4]

Editors

References

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