Journal Details
Journal of Baltic Studies
Aims & Scope
Ranking: 20/38 (Area Studies)
© 2009 Thomson Reuters, Journal Citation Reports®
The Journal of Baltic Studies, the official journal of the Association for the Advancement of Baltic Studies (AABS), is a peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary journal for the purpose of advancing the accumulation of knowledge about all aspects of the Baltic Sea region's political, social, economic, and cultural life, past and present. Preference is given to original contributions that are of general scholarly interest.
The Association for the Advancement of Baltic Studies is an international, educational, and scholarly non-profit organization. Established in 1968, the purpose of the Association is the promotion of research and education in Baltic Studies. Its activities include sponsorship of meetings and conferences for the exchange of scholarly views, recognition of scholarly achievement in the field, and dissemination of news of current interest in the area of Baltic Studies. Membership to the AABS is open to anyone wishing to support the endeavors of the Association. For further information about the Association, please go to http://depts.washington.edu/aabs/.
The Association can be contacted at:
Association for the Advancement of Baltic Studies, Executive Office, 14743 Braemar Crescent Way, Darnestown MD, 20878-3911 USA.
The editor can be contacted for further details at:
David Smith
Department of Central and East European Studies,
University of Glasgow,
8-9 Lilybank Gardens
Glasgow, G12 8RZ
UK
All submitted to a rigorous peer review process, based on initial editor screening and double-blind refereeing by a minimum of two specialist referees.
Selection of Articles
Political Support in the Baltic States 1993-2004
Piret Ehin (38.1, 2007)
Population Displacement in the Baltic Region in the Twentieth Century: From ‘Refugee Studies' to Refugee History
Peter Gatrell (38.1, 2007)
Bloody Sunday: What did Gorbachev know about the January 1991 Events in Vilnius and Riga?
Ainius Lasas (38.2, 2007)
Constructions of Whiteness: Latvian Women Workers in Post-war Britain
Linda McDowell (38.1, 2007)
Why did Estonia perform best? The North-South Gap in the Post-Soviet Economic Transition of the Baltic States
Zenonas Norkus (38.1, 2007)
Divided we fall: Divisions within the National Partisans of Vidzeme and Latgale, 1945
Geoffrey Swain (38.2, 2007)

