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Author Guidelines

Only electronic submittals will be accepted. Authors should submit their work directly through the JEI website. Please indicate in your electronic submittal under which section the work should be considered: Research Articles, Reviews, Commentary, Book Reviews, News Articles, Points of View, and Letters to the Editor. Also, in email, please put in the subject line,  “Journal of Environmental Investing Submittal.” All manuscripts will be accepted in Word format with the “.doc” extension (please do not save as a “.dot” or “.dotx” file). 

Manuscripts should be organized as follows: 

Cover sheet: Attach a cover sheet with the following information:  manuscript title; author name(s) and title or position; institutional affiliation; and the corresponding author’s address, telephone number, fax number, and e-mail address. All pages should be numbered, with the cover sheet as page one. To facilitate blind peer reviews, author names and affiliations should appear only on the cover sheet. 

Acknowledgments: Place on a separate sheet, located after the cover sheet. The study sponsors, if any, should be included in the acknowledgments.  

Abstract: An abstract of no more than 225 words should accompany the manuscript on a separate sheet (page 3). The abstract should be a stand-alone summary of the manuscript's central findings and argument, not an overview of the manuscript's outline. The title of the manuscript should appear at the top of the abstract page.  

Main Text: Manuscripts by authors schooled in the natural and social sciences will typically have separate sections for Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion, and Conclusions. Authors schooled in the legal and humanistic disciplines are likely to organize their materials in a way that illuminates the logical connections between different elements of the argument. In all cases, use appropriate section headings to help guide the reader. 

Following are general guidelines for preparing the basic elements of the manuscript. If you have questions that are not addresses under one of these descriptions, please contact the Journal. 

Text Font:  Please use 12-point Times New Roman for all text. Double space the entire manuscript.

Document Layout: The margins for the entire document are one inch at the top and bottom; the left margin: 1.25; the right margin: 1.19; and the header and footer from
the edge: 0.5.

Paragraph Layout: Left alignment. Any indentations, such as for block quotations, should be 0.25.  Spacing between paragraphs should be 14 pts. Text Headings:  Please do not  “stack” headings on top of each other; use the text to preview the subheads in a section rather than diving right into the first subhead.  The following system is used in the Journal: A-level headings stand alone and are 12-point, boldface type with standard initial letter capitalization; B-level headings (subheads) stand alone and are 12-point, boldface italic type with standard initial letter capitalization; and C-level heads (subheads) begin their relevant paragraphs, are followed by a period, and are 12-point, boldface type with standard initial letter capitalization. If your paper organization requires additional levels of headings, please design with the intent of making hierarchy obvious (you can also consult the Chicago Manual of Style, 16th ed., University of Chicago Press).

Spelling, Word Usage, and Text Styling:  For points not otherwise covered in these guidelines, please use Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary (10th ed.) and The Chicago Manual of Style (16th ed., University of Chicago Press).

Foreign Abbreviations:  Spell out e.g., etc., i.e., et al., vs., and so forth as their English equivalents. In other words, use the terms for example, and so on, that is, and others, and versus (except in citing legal cases, where v. is used).

Colloquialisms, Contractions, and Acronyms:  Avoid slang and word contractions except when they appear in quotations and in examples containing “natural” dialogue.

Resist the use of acronyms and other forms of abbreviation. As a general rule, an acronym is appropriate only (a) if it is used frequently in a portion or all of a manuscript or (b) if the acronym itself has entered common usage in everyday conversation (e.g., “USEPA” for “United States Environmental Protection Agency”). The first time an accepted acronym is used in your paper, spell the term out and place the acronym immediately after it, enclosed in parentheses; then, in its additional appearances, use the acronym.

Quotations and Extracts:  Quotations and extracts from other works are handled in one of two ways, depending on length.

For a quotation of fewer than 100 words, run the quotation into the regular text. Enclose it in quotation marks, and cite the source in the text (for further explanation, see “in-text citations” under number 6 on Citations, Notes, and References). If the quotation is a fragment, remember to incorporate it grammatically into the surrounding text.

For a quotation of 100 words or more (an extract), use a block formation, that is, set it off from the rest of the text. Omit the quotation marks and indent the entire extract (and omit the paragraph indentation in the first line). Leave an extra line of space above and below the quotation. The font size and style should be the same as the body of the manuscript (12 pt Times New Roman). Place the citation at the end of the quotation in square brackets, not parentheses, and place the final punctuation after the closing bracket.

Authors are strongly encouraged to illustrate their work with tables, figures, maps, and photographs. Please identify all illustrations as figures and number consecutively throughout manuscript (Figure 1: The Cost for 2010; Figure 2: The Cost for 2011, etc.) All figures should be referred to within the text. For example, “As Figure 1 illustrates” and  “Global emissions rose in 2009 (Figure 5).”

Figures:  Authors should submit any figures in electronic form, preferably TIF (line drawings should be at least 600 ppi; halftone or gray-scale figures should be at least 300 ppi) or EPS (with fonts embedded) format. Color figures must be at least 300 ppi CMYK. Provide figure captions together on a separate page. Tables (in Word or Excel that the editorial office will be able to manipulate for formatting purposes) should not duplicate data also provided in figures or in the text. For tables of data that might be of value only to a few readers, authors should consider indicating that the data is available on request from the author. Table and figure captions/legends should make them understandable without reference to the text. Tables and figures must be referred to in the text. 

Citations, Notes, and References: Use in-text citations rather than footnotes or endnotes to identify sources and tangential material, or to provide explanations.  Follow the in-text citation style found in The Chicago Manual of Style, 16th Edition. 

Full bibliographic information for all references cited in the text should appear at the end of the manuscript. Reference entries should be alphabetized by author name, or if there are no individual names, by organization. Follow the reference style found in The Chicago Manual of Style, 16th Edition.  

Sources and Permissions: Please identify the sources of all text, figures, or tables (even your own previously published work).  The following guidelines will assist you in dealing with the permissible items in your work as you prepare your manuscript.  Please be aware that these guidelines reflect only our internal administrative policy. They are not to be considered determinative or to be a statement of what does or does not constitute “fair use” in every case in the legal sense. Also, the guidelines do not relieve you of any obligations under your Publishing Agreement or under copyright laws.  You are permitted to quote words, tables, figures, and other material by outside authors to support your own points, provided that the information is accurate and appropriately credited. Depending on the source, length, or nature of a quotation, permission from the copyright holder may be needed.  As author, you are responsible for:

obtaining written consent from the copyright holder,

submitting all permissions with your final manuscript, and

paying any fees involved in obtaining permission, unless otherwise stated in your contract.

NOTE: Requesting permissions can be a lengthy process. Some publishers will take three months or longer to reply to your request. Therefore, please initiate requests to secure permission to reprint items as you incorporate those items into your manuscript. Please do not wait until you are compiling your complete and final manuscript to begin the request process. Not all requests may be granted by the time of publication, and publication could be delayed. Keep in mind that for legal purposes, the signed originals of all permission releases must be submitted with your final manuscript. 

The Journal will use a blind peer-review process. The reviewer will not know the identity or location of the author(s), and the author(s) will receive reviewer's comments without the reviewer's identity or location. Authors are invited to submit names of appropriate reviewers, but the final choice of reviewers lies with the editor. Authors will be notified of the disposition of their manuscript as soon as possible. 

Upon acceptance of manuscripts, authors will be requested to send the editorial office an electronic version of the manuscript. Please contact the editorial office for exceptions: an author's access to computing equipment will not be a factor in the publication of a manuscript. 

The final version of the manuscript should include a short biographical sketch of each author (150 words or less per author). 

All authors must sign the “Transfer of Copyright Agreement” and a disclosure of commercial interests before the manuscript can be published. The Transfer Agreement enables the JEI to protect the copyrighted material for the authors, but authors do not thereby relinquish proprietary rights or rights to use their work in the future. The copyright transfer covers the exclusive rights to reproduce and distribute the manuscript, including reprints, photographic reproduction, microfilm, electronic versions, and all other reproduction methods, plus translations into languages other than English. 

It is a condition of publication that manuscripts submitted to this Journal have not been published previously, in part or in whole, in a peer-reviewed journal. All prior presentations of the manuscript material must be disclosed to the editor at the time of initial manuscript submission. It is also a condition of publication that the author(s) will not simultaneously submit or publish the material elsewhere. 

The corresponding author will receive page proofs for final proofreading shortly before the article is scheduled for publication. Authors bear full responsibility for accuracy and completeness of their material. Any corrections (not revisions) should be made at this time, and the page proofs must be returned to the publisher within 48 hours of receipt. Extensive revisions are strongly discouraged at this stage of the publication process and, if permitted by the editor and publisher, are likely to result in special charges to the author.

 

 

Submission Preparation Checklist

As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.

  1. 1. The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal or medium for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
  2. 2. The submission file is in Microsoft Word document file format.

  3. 3. Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.

  4. 4. The text is double-spaced; uses a 12-point font; employs italics, rather than underlining (except with URL addresses); and all illustrations, figures, and tables are placed within the text at the appropriate points, rather than at the end.

  5. 5. The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines, which is found in About the Journal.

  6. 6. The instructions in Ensuring a Blind Review have been followed.
 

Copyright Notice

Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:

 

  • Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.
  • Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.

 

 

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