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Instructions for Authors

Thank you for choosing to submit your paper to JAPED. The instructions given here will ensure that we have everything required so your paper can move through peer review, production, and publication smoothly. Please take the time to read and follow them as closely as possible, as doing so will ensure your paper matches the journal’s requirements.  Failure to abide by the submission procedures will result in your article being returned to you. Should you fail to present a well formatted and edited manuscript after three attempts at correction, it will be deemed that your paper is not a good fit for this journal, hence your article will be desk rejected.

Since we publish open access, we expect authors and contributors to meet us halfway by exercising due diligence and helping to re-ignite the passion for good and well-presented advanced research.

One Author designated as corresponding Author should provide a valid:
• E-mail address
• Full institutional and/or postal address
• Telephone number

The submitting author should ensure that all necessary information has been provided, including but not limited to:
• Abstract, Keywords and Abbreviations
• All figures have captions and are mentioned in the text
• All tables (including title, description, footnotes) are mentioned and discussed in the text
• Ethics declaration, Conflicts and Interests, Acknowledgement
Include a one paragraph biography of all authors and contributors to the article.

In order to ensure efficient processing and typesetting, please ensure that:
• The manuscript has been "spellchecked" and "grammar-checked"
• All the references are in the correct format for this journal
• All references mentioned in the Reference list are cited in the text
• Permission has been obtained for use of copyrighted material from other sources (including the Web)

All submissions should be prepared with the following files and submitted via our online submission system or emailed to the editors.

Checklist: What to include in your submission

  1. Author details. Please ensure all listed authors meet the Porthologos Press authorship criteria. All authors of a manuscript should include their full name and affiliation on the cover page of the manuscript. Where available, please also include ORCiDs and Google Scholar handles.
  2. Should contain an unstructured abstract of 300 words.
  3. Include at least 5 keywords.
  4. Funding details. Please supply all details required by your funding and grant-awarding bodies as follows:
  5. Disclosure statement. This is to acknowledge any financial or non-financial interest that has arisen from the direct applications of your research. If there are no relevant competing interests to declare please state this within the article, for example: The authors report there are no competing interests to declare. We adhere to Committee on Publication Ethic (COPE) guidelines and policies regarding the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools. Authors using AI tools in the writing of a manuscript, production of images or graphical elements of the paper, or in the collection and analysis of data, must be transparent in disclosing in this section how the AI tool was used, and which tool was used. Authors are fully responsible for the content of their manuscript, even those parts produced by an AI tool, and are thus liable for any breach of publication ethics.
  6. Authors may submit their manuscript files in Word (as .doc or .docx) or LaTeX (as .pdf), format. Word files must not be protected.
  7. Data availability statement. Authors are required to provide a data availability statement, detailing where data associated with a paper can be found and how it can be accessed. If data cannot be made open, authors should state why in the data availability statement. The DAS should include the hyperlink, DOI or other persistent identifier associated with the data set(s), or information on how the data can be requested from the authors.
  8. Data deposition. If you choose to share or make the data underlying the study open, please deposit your data in a recognized data repository prior to or at the time of submission. You will be asked to provide the DOI, pre-reserved DOI, or other persistent identifier for the data set.
  9. Supplemental online material. Supplemental material can be a video, dataset, fileset, sound file or anything which supports (and is pertinent to) your paper.
  10. Figures. Figures should be high quality (1200 dpi for line art, 600 dpi for grayscale and 300 dpi for colour, at the correct size). Figures should be supplied in one of our preferred file formats: Microsoft Word (DOC or DOCX).
  11. Tables. Tables should present new information rather than duplicating what is in the text. Readers should be able to interpret the table without reference to the text. Please supply editable files.
  12. Equations. If you are submitting your manuscript as a Word document, please ensure that equations are editable.     

JAPED is archived in EBSCO, and Portico.

 

Manuscript Length

We encourage authors to write an article between 5,000 and 10,000 words. Letters and comments and review works are often shorter, between 1,000 and 2,000 words.

 

References

Alphabetical order, Unnumbered

 

Journals:

Bob-Milliar, GM and Nyaaba, AY. (2022). Modernising Royals and Capitalists of Kumase: the Ashanti Turf Club, 1950-1980s. Journal of West African History 8, no. 1, pp. 45-76.                    

Bekale, NA and Alagidede, I.P (2021). The Holy Spirit of Iboga and a Contemporary Perspective on Africa’s Spiritual Renaissance: Focus on Gabonese Bwiti Tradition. Journal of Indigenous and Shamanic Studies 2 no 1, pp 32-50

 

Books:

Abdul-Aziz Iddrisu and Imhotep Paul Alagidede (2022). Monetary Policy and Food Inflation in Emerging and Developing Economies. ISBN 9781032049663, 120 Pages. Routledge, London

 

Edited books

Moyo, S. and Yeros, P., (eds.). (2005). Reclaiming the Land: The resurgence of rural movements in Africa, Asia and Latin America, Zed Books Ltd. and David Philip, London and Cape Town

 

Chapters in Edited books

Bob-Milliar, GM. ‘Africa’s Contributions to World Civilization.’ In Samuel O. Oloruntoba and Toyin Falola (eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of Africa and the Changing Global Order. Pp. 25-42. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 2022. 

Bob-Milliar, GM. ‘Ghana: Recent History.’ In Iain Frame (ed.), Africa South of the Sahara 2022, 51st Edition. Pp.536-540. London: Routledge, 2021.

Alagidede,I.P and Ibrahim,M. (2021). Threshold effects of financial access on income inequality in Africa: empirics and policy implications, in Inclusive Financial Development, edited by Ahmad Hassan Ahmad, David T. Lewellen and Victor Murindi, Edward Elgar, London.

 

Working Papers

Pedroni, P. (1995). Panel cointegration; asymptotic and finite sample properties of pooled time series tests, with an application to the PPP hypothesis. Indiana University, Working Papers in Economics No. 95-013. University of California, San Diego

 

Discussion Paper/Unpublished Paper

Levin, A. and Lin, C. (1993). Unit root tests in panel data: asymptotic and finite-sample properties. Discussion Paper/Unpublished Paper No 34-7, mimeo, University of California, San Diego.

 

Conference Papers

Mills, E. (1971). City sizes in developing economies, paper presented at the Rehovot Conference on Urbanisation and Development in Developing Countries, Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, 16-24 August.

 

Website

Odei-Mensah, J. (2018). Global investments prospects and financial interconnectedness. Available at http://www.afeconsult/research/journals (accessed 2 July 2018).

 

Online content:

SARS Expert Committee, SARS in Hong Kong : From Experience to Action. Hong Kong SARS Expert Committee, 2003. Available from: http://www.sars-expertcom.gov.hk/english/reports/reports.html.

Cited journals should be abbreviated according to ISO 4 rules. For examples, see http://www.issn.org/services/online-services/access-to-the-ltwa/.

 

Proceedings

Cox, D. R. (1961). Tests of separate families of hypotheses, in Proceedings of the Fourth Berkeley Symposium on Mathematical Statistics and Probability, Vol. 1, University of Berkeley Press, Berkeley, CA, pp. 105–23.

 

English Editing

In order to speed up the peer review process, we encourage non-native English-speaking authors to send their manuscript to a native English speaker or an English editing company for polishing before submitting to our journal.