static1static2static3static4

ft   y

Risk, Hazards & Crisis in Public Policy

RHC3 print JPEG

 
Online ISSN: 1944-4079
 

Risk, Hazards and Crisis are our daily companions in these times. This much needed new journal will cover, among other issues, crisis prediction, preparation, mitigation, response and recovery. It will probe questions of physical, economic, health and environmental security. The problems are well known; it is time there were some solutions.

Editor-in-Chief:
Sanneke Kuipers, Leiden University
 
Editorial Board:
Daniel Aldrich, Northeastern University
Christopher Ansell, University of California - Berkeley
Erik Baekkeskov, University of Melbourne

Thomas Birkland, North Carolina State University
Arjen Boin, Leiden University
Raphael Bossong,  Stiftung Wissenschaft and Politik, Berlin
Andreas Duit,  Stockholm University

Warren Eller, West Virginia University
Brian Gerber, Arizona State University
George Haddow, Bullock and Haddow LLC, George Washington University
Liesbet Heyse, Groningen University
Ann Keller,  University of California – Berkeley

John Kiefer, University of New Orleans
Martin Lodge,  London School of Economics
Allan McConnell,  University of Sydney

Daniel Nohrstedt, Uppsala University
Robert O’Connor, National Science Foundation
Barbara Quiram, Texas A&M Health Science Center
Sandra Resodihardjo, Radboud University
Patrick Roberts, Virginia Tech
Scott Robinson,  University of Oklahoma
Alka Sapat, Florida Atlantic University
Carol Silva, University of Oklahoma

Alastair Stark, University of Queensland
Deborah Thomas, University of Colorado - Denver
Marjolein van Asselt, Maastricht University and Dutch Safety Board

Gary Webb, University of North Texas
 

Policy Studies Yearbook

 
 
The annual Policy Studies Yearbook is an international listing of policy scholars with contact information, fields of specialization, research references, and a short statement of research interests. This provides an accessible directory for who is studying what, where, and how in the field of public policy. Additionally, the Yearbook has also published an Annual Review since 2009. Free access to all past issues can be found on the home page of the Yearbook website. The Editor is now calling for papers for the latest Yearbook Annual Review. Article and commentary proposals and/or submissions of 8-9,000 words or less, including abstract citations and references in Chicago Author-Date style, should be sent as Word files with a covering email to   This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.  
 
Traditionally, the Yearbook Annual Review focused on publishing review and research articles co-authored by faculty and advanced graduate students. From 2021, inclusion in the Review publication is open to all scholars who conduct research in public policy, including independent scholars, faculty professors, advanced graduate students and policy practitioners. Submissions will undergo rigorous double-blind peer review.  In the past, the content of the Yearbook Review included short review articles summarizing the most recent scholarship in specific policy subfields. We will continue to publish such articles on the state of the academic literature now and in the future. However, from 2021 the Yearbook’s Annual Review is broadening its aims and scope to also include articles and shorter commentaries reviewing key practical policy developments of the previous year (or last few years). Such articles and commentaries may focus on either one policy area across several countries, or policy developments in a single state or region (one policy area or related areas). The policy implications, developments, and misdevelopments have been especially momentous lately concerning, for instance: the global pandemic, international aid and cooperation, democratic accountability, vaccine development and distribution, lockdown policies, Covid-19 variant transmission, economic recovery, trade restrictions and opportunities, public diplomacy, great powers and grand strategy, border controls, freedom of movement and association, regional fragmentation, globalization and its discontents, and a host of other areas. There is, of course, much to be said concerning the lightning speed of many policy developments over the last year or so, both within and between states. It is the aim of the Yearbook Annual Review of 2021 to publish the best articles and commentaries in these and other policy areas and provide a spirited forum for discussion, comment, critique and careful connection to the most recent academic advancements in the literature.
 
Articles will all be featured in the listings within the Yearbook to facilitate access to current policy research. They will also be featured here on the Policy Studies Organization (PSO) website, and listed in the PSO curriculum project searchable article database along with the many other articles published in PSO journals such as the Policy Studies Journal, Review of Policy Research, Politics & Policy, Policy and Internet, and Asian Politics and Policy.
 

Editor:
Emma R. Norman
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
 

Politics & Policy

 
POLP print JPEG
 
Online ISSN: 1747-1346
 
 
Politics & Policy (P&P) is a peer-reviewed journal for scholars in public policy, political science, and comparative and international studies. Established in 1973, it seeks to bring together manuscripts offering quality original research that makes a strong theoretical or empirical contribution to existing comparative policy literature, or to policy studies and political science more generally via the use of comparative methods. These include, but are not restricted to: trans-border, cross-national or wider international research focusing on comparative policy and/or politics; comparative studies in development, democratization, democracy, participation, voting behavior, electoral politics and policy, and security strategy; international relations and comparative foreign policy; analyses of the theory, values, and/or public/political support influencing policy trends, adoption, contestation, or change; policy framing; the challenges, and opportunities facing policy networks; comparative policy design and misdesign. The editors are committed to rigorous international standards of peer reviewing, timely responses to submissions, and the promotion of the best new research and professional debate available.
 
Editor-in-Chief:
David Mena, Universidad IberoAmericana, Mexico City
 
 

Review of Policy Research

 
ropr large700
 
Impact Factor: 1.562
ISI Journal Citation Reports © Ranking: 2016: 17/47 (Public Administration); 56/165 (Political Science)
Online ISSN: 1541-1338
 
 
Review of Policy Research (RPR) is an international peer-reviewed journal devoted to the publication of research and analysis examining the politics and policy of science and technology. These may include issues of science policy, environment, resource management, information networks, cultural industries, biotechnology, security and surveillance, privacy, globalization, education, research and innovation, development, intellectual property, health and demographics. The journal encompasses research and analysis on politics and the outcomes and consequences of policy change in domestic and comparative contexts.
 
The audience for RPR comprises members of the academic community, as well as members of the policy community, including government officials, NGOs and advocacy groups, research institutes and policy analysts.
 
RPR is affiliated to the Science,Technology and Environmental Politics (STEP) organized section of the APSA.
 
Editors-in-Chief:
Nita Farahany, Duke University
Tim Profeta, Duke University
Kenneth Rogerson, Duke University
 
Managing Editor:
Sarah Rispin Sedlak, Duke University

Asian Politics & Policy

 
ASPP masthead
 
Online ISSN: 1943-0787
 
 
The Asian Politics & Policy (APP) journal has editing offices at the Asian Center, University of the Philippines. The journal has articles of major importance to everyone who wants in depth coverage of the important policy issues arising from the rapid growth of the region. In addition to research articles, Asian Politics & Policy provides book, website and blog reviews. Asian Politics & Policy is internationally oriented, with its editorial board members from prestigious universities and research institutions in China, Japan, South Korea, ASEAN nations, India, Australia, Russia, France, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The journal has its editorial offices located in China and the United States. By so doing, it hopes to better stimulate academic dialogue between scholars in Asia and the rest of the world.
 
Editor-in-Chief:
Aries Arugay, University of the Philippines

Join Our Mailing List

Sign up for the PSO Email List in order to receive important announcements and information.