Submissions

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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.
  • The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
  • The submission file is in OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, or RTF document file format.
  • Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.
  • The text is single-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.
  • The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines.

Author Guidelines

Article submission and publishing are free of charge.

Submissions must be in English and formatted to be double-spaced with suitably wide margins, an A4 page size, and automatic page numbering.

Articles are normally no longer than 8,000 words of main text including bibliography.

The Journal will consider longer papers, but, once these limits are exceeded, authors should bear in mind the editorial policy that the acceptance bar raises with increasing length.

Manuscripts should be compiled in the following order: cover page; title; abstract (not exceeding 200 words); keywords (3 to 6); main text; appendices (as appropriate); references.

All the authors of a paper should include their full names, affiliations, postal addresses, telephone and fax numbers and email addresses on the cover page of the manuscript. If a paper is co-written, one author should be identified as the Corresponding Author. The cover page must be submitted as a separate document. All submitted manuscripts must be prepared for blind review, with revealing acknowledgements and self-identifying references removed.

Sources are cited in the text by the author’s last name, the publication date of the work cited, and a page, e.g. (Barber 2007: 324). Full details appear in the reference list in which the year of publication appears immediately after the author’s name:

Barber, A. 2007. “Linguistic Structure and the Brain.” Croatian Journal of Philosophy 21 (7): 317—341.

Williamson, T. 2013. Identity and Discrimination. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.

Devitt, M. 2004. “The Case for Referential Descriptions.” In M. Reimer and A. Bezuidenhout (eds.). Descriptions and Beyond. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 280—305.

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