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Instructions for Authors: Journal of Cultural Marketing Strategy

First Published August 2015 Latest Issue July 2024

Journal of Cultural Marketing Strategy is the major peer-reviewed journal dedicated to the advancement of best practice and latest thinking in cultural marketing, incorporating multicultural and cross-cultural marketing.... read more

Subjects covered include: cultural marketing; multicultural marketing; cross-cultural marketing; demographics and marketing; multicultural advertising; acculturation, assimilation, separation and marginalisation in marketing; brand marketing; marketing research; marketing methodologies; consumer research and behaviour; ethnographic research.

Instructions for Authors

1. The Journal particularly welcomes contributions from multicultural and other marketing professionals including best practice articles; case studies; new approaches and techniques; market and consumer research; legal and regulatory updates; or other material of relevance to multicultural marketing professionals. They can be more descriptive (and less analytical) of current business practice and need not display in-depth knowledge of previous academic work in the field. The Journal will also publish traditionally styled academic papers which will be expected, at a minimum, to display a sound knowledge of previous work in the area and some original research content. All articles must have clear implications for business practice.

2. Articles and papers can be anywhere from 2,500 to 6,000 words.

3. Authors should not seek to use the Journal as a vehicle for marketing any specific product or service.

4. Articles and papers must be supported by references to examples and case studies, and wherever possible industry surveys and existing literature.

5. References should be in the Vancouver system i.e. referred to by number in the text with superscripted numbers (like so¹) and set out in full in a consecutive numerical list at the end of the article. When referring to the same book or journal more than once, authors should not revert to the original number. Rather, a different (consecutive) number is inserted. Then, at the end of the article, the correct style is 'Surname (of author), ref x. above', or if it refers to the reference immediately preceding, 'Ibid' is inserted in the list.

6. Submissions should be written in the third person and authors should avoid the use of personal pronouns, slang and any other language which is not in keeping with the professional and academic style of the Journal.

7. Tables and graphs should be submitted in their original Word/Excel format. PowerPoint slides and screengrabs should be avoided. An electronic copy of the original data must also be included.

8. All papers should be accompanied by a short abstract of up to 300 words summarising the paper and up to 7 keywords detailing the paper’s main points. Please note the abstract should not provide a general introduction to the paper but rather should describe the purpose or problems addressed; what was done; any findings or trends identified; and the conclusions and any wider implications.

9. All articles should be accompanied by 4-6 keywords which summarise the key themes of the article.

10. Articles should be accompanied by a short (up to 200 words) description of the author(s) and, if appropriate, the organisation of which he or she is a member.

11. All acronyms such as titles of organisations etc should be written out first in full and thereafter in their initials.

12. Photographs and illustrations supporting articles should be submitted where appropriate. Photographs should be submitted electronically with figures saved as TIF, EPS/PDF with all fonts embedded or JPEG (high resolution) files at a minimum 300dpi and preferably in black and white. Further guidance on the submission of graphics is available on request from the Editor, Jake Beniflah, at jake@multicultural-science.org.

13. With appropriate exceptions, eg pints and gallons, measurements should be in metric units.

General

14. Articles should be submitted via email in Microsoft Word format to the Editor, Jake Beniflah, at jake@multicultural-science.org.

15. We do not charge authors to submit articles.

16. Authors must ensure that references to named people and/or organisations are accurate, not racist or sexist and without libellous implications.

17. All contributions sent to the Publisher, whether invited or not, will be submitted to the Journal's Editors and Editorial Board for anonymous peer-review. Any such contribution must bear the author's full name and address, even if this is not for publication, although this is removed for the duration of the peer-review process. Contributions, whether published pseudonymously or not, are accepted on the strict understanding that the author is responsible for the accuracy of all opinion, technical comment, factual report, data, figures, illustrations and photographs. Publication does not necessarily imply that these are the opinions of the Editorial Board, Editors or the Publisher, nor do the Board, Editors or Publishers accept any liability for the accuracy of such comment, report and other technical and factual information. The Publisher will, however, strive to ensure that all opinion, comments, reports, data, figures, illustrations and photographs are accurate, insofar as it is within its abilities to do so. The Publisher reserves the right to edit, abridge or omit material submitted for publication.

18. Authors should be aware that articles submitted to the Journal should not be simultaneously submitted for review to any other publications.

19. The author bears the responsibility for checking whether material submitted is subject to copyright or ownership rights, eg photographs, illustrations, trade literature and data. Where use is so restricted, the Publisher must be informed with the submission of the material.

20. No contribution will be accepted which has been published elsewhere, unless it is expressly invited or agreed by the Publisher. Articles and contributions published become the copyright of the Publisher, unless otherwise agreed.

21. All reasonable efforts are made to ensure accurate reproduction of text, photographs and illustrations. The Publisher does not accept responsibility for mistakes, be they editorial or typographical, nor for consequences resulting from them.