Journal Details
Australian Feminist Studies
Instructions for Authors
***Note to Authors: please make sure your contact address information is clearly visible on the outside of all packages you are sending to Editors.***
Australian Feminist Studies is proud to sustain a clear political commitment to feminist teaching, research and scholarship. We are a fully-refereed international journal. We publish work of the highest calibre that shares our concerns with issues in any of a spectrum of feminisms.
We wish, too, to promote cutting-edge feminist scholarship both within and beyond conventional academic disciplines. We publish innovative course outlines and discussion of feminist pedagogy; reports on local, national and international conferences; analyses of government and trade union policies that concern women; discussion in cultural and postcolonial studies that involve feminist analyses.
We invite contributions, and require electronic submission using .doc, .rtf or similar format (but not .pdf). Electronic contributions should be addressed to Cathy Hawkins, Assistant Editor, and sent to: Email: afs@hmn.mq.edu.au. Please ensure that your submission conforms to the referencing guide set out below.
Please send all other correspondence (except reviews) to:
Professor Mary Spongberg
Modern History, Politics and International Relations
Faculty of the Arts
Macquarie University
NSW 2109 Australia
Phone: +61 2 9850-8887
E-mail: Cathy Hawkins: afs@hmn.mq.edu.au
Please send review copies of books and book reviews to:
Australian Feminist Studies
4th Floor, Building W6A
Modern History, Politics and International Relations
Faculty of the Arts
Macquarie University
NSW 2109 Australia
E-mail: Nicole Moore, Reviews Editor: afs@hmn.mq.edu.au
Articles must follow the Chicago referencing style.
In text referencing
Single author
Blinksworth (1987, 125)
(P. Brown 1991) - if the ref list includes two or more works by different authors with same last name and date
Two or three authors
(Finburn and Cosby 1990), (Smith,Wessen, and Gunless 1988)
More than three authors
(Zipursky et al. 1959)
Multiple references
(Light 1972; Keller 1896a, 1896b, 1907)
Referencing
Book
Murphy, John. 2000. Imagining the fifties: Private sentiment and political culture in Menzies' Australia. Sydney: UNSW Press and Pluto Press.
Edited book
Niall, Brenda, and John Thompson with Pamela Williams, eds. 1998. The Oxford book of Australian letters. Melbourne: Oxford University Press.
Chapter from edited book
Peterson, M. Jeanne. 1972. The Victorian governess: Status incongruence in family and society. In and be still: Women in the Victorian age, edited by Martha Vicinus. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Article
Cunningham, Stuart. 1989. Style, form and history in Australian mini-series. Southern Review 22 (3): 315-30.
Newspaper article
Lusetich, Robert. 2003. Annika lives her dream with man-sized challenge. The Australian, Thursday 22 May: 18S.
Web reference
Evans, Kate. 2003. Tattoo. Australian Museum Online. Available from http://www.deathonline.net/ remembering/stories/index.cfm (accessed 5 July 2005).
Articles are sent to at least two readers for assessment; the readers are not sent the names of authors, and authors are not sent the names of the readers who assess their material. AFS then asks authors of articles that have been accepted to provide an additional copy of their articles on floppy disk.
As corresponding author, you will receive free access to your article on Taylor & Francis Online. You will be given access to the My authored works section of Taylor & Francis Online, which shows you all your published articles. You can easily view, read, and download your published articles from there. In addition, if someone has cited your article, you will be able to see this information. We are committed to promoting and increasing the visibility of your article and have provided this guidance on how you can help.
Corresponding authors can receive a complimentary copy of the issue containing their article. Article reprints can be ordered through Rightslink® when you receive your proofs. If you have any queries about reprints, please contact the Taylor & Francis Author Services team at reprints@tandf.co.uk. To order extra copies of the issue containing your article, please contact our Customer Services team at Adhoc@tandf.co.uk.
Copyright. It is a condition of publication that authors assign copyright or licence the publication rights in their articles, including abstracts, to Taylor & Francis. This enables us to ensure full copyright protection and to disseminate the article, and of course the Journal, to the widest possible readership in print and electronic formats as appropriate. Authors retain many rights under the Taylor & Francis rights policies, which can be found at http://journalauthors.tandf.co.uk/preparation/copyright.asp. Authors are themselves responsible for obtaining permission to reproduce copyright material from other sources.
Permissions: As an author, you are required to secure permission if you want to reproduce any figure, table, or extract from the text of another source. This applies to direct reproduction as well as "derivative reproduction" (where you have created a new figure or table which derives substantially from a copyrighted source). For further information and FAQs, please see http://journalauthors.tandf.co.uk/preparation/permission.asp

Visit our Author Services website for further resources and guides to the complete publication process and beyond.

