Social Change
Social Change publishes empirically-grounded analytical papers, theoretical essays and policy discussions in the field of social change and development. This multi-disciplinary, quarterly journal has a global readership among academia, social movements, NGOs and policy makers. We invite contributions from eminent thinkers and researchers as well as young, innovative writers from India and abroad.
This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).Manuscripts should be emailed, as MS Word files, to socialchange@csdindia.org. Manuscripts will be considered for publication only if written and formatted in accordance with the journal’s style guide. Otherwise, these will be returned or desk rejected.
Submissions emailed to Social Change are normally acknowledged within 2–3 days. Authors, who do not receive an acknowledgement in their inboxes, are requested to check their spam folders. Owing to the bulk of submissions received, frequent queries from the author/s cannot be entertained by the Editorial Team.
Manuscripts should only be submitted with the consent of all contributing authors. The individual responsible for submitting the manuscript should carefully check that all those whose work contributed to the manuscript are listed as authors.
Ensure you upload all relevant manuscript files, including any additional supplemental files (including reporting guidelines where relevant).
Social Change, an interdisciplinary social science journal started in 1971, carries research papers, perspective essays and commentaries devoted to issues of social change and development in India, as well as Asia, Africa and Latin America, though not excluding relevant studies from Europe and North America. Its book reviews and review articles, covering publications from India and abroad, reflect on trends in scholarly thought in the global realm.
Even though the journal devotes considerable attention to publishing articles on the Indian development experience, it values global scholarship on social change. An international Editorial Board of eminent experts is actively involved in helping the journal to pursue its goals. Regular contributions from foreign scholars and an expanding global readership testify to this.
Sponsored by the Council for Social Development, the journal aims to analyse and assess ideas, policies and practices concerning the interests of marginalised groups. Social, economic, cultural and political dimensions of social change, especially in relation to changing conditions of social groups, are of interest to the journal. Issues of social development, especially health, education, social welfare, environment, urbanisation, migration, displacement, rural problems and human rights are particularly sought after areas. Articles on the rights of women, children, disabled, minorities, marginal farmers and unorganised workers are especially welcome. Through its periodic special thematic issues the journal attempts to capture the current state of academic discourse.
Social Change is a double-anonymised, refereed journal and seeks to maintain high standards of serious scholarship. It tries to ensure that empirically grounded contributions are theoretically informed and theoretical and policy essays are rooted in empirical evidence.
The quarterly journal, currently celebrating its Golden Jubilee, has a global readership among academia, social movements, NGOs and policymakers. Contributions are welcome from eminent thinkers and researchers as well as young, writers from India and abroad.
| Riaz Ahmad | Council for Social Development and University of Delhi, New Delhi, India |
| Ankita Goyal | Council for Social Development, New Delhi, India |
| Poornima M | Council for Social Development, New Delhi, India |
| Gurmeet Kaur | Council for Social Development, New Delhi, India |
| Monica Bruckmann | Federal Flomenance University, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
| Gopal Guru | Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India |
| Barbara Harriss-White | University of Oxford, Oxford, UK |
| Rounaq Jahan | University of Dhaka, Dhaka and Columbia University, New York, USA |
| Mark Juergensmeyer | University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, USA |
| Kalpana Kannabiran | Council for Social Development, New Delhi, India |
| Sujit Kumar Mishra | Council for Social Development, Southern Regional Centre, Hyderabad, India |
| Manoranjan Mohanty | Council for Social Development, New Delhi, India |
| Nitya Nanda | Council for Social Development, New Delhi, India |
| Deepak Nayyar | Council for Social Development and Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India |
| Imrana Qadeer | Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India |
| K Srinath Reddy | Council for Social Development, New Delhi, India |
| Ma Rong | Peking University, Beijing, China |
| K B Saxena | Council for Social Development, New Delhi, India |
| Mohamed Seedat | University of South Africa, Pretoria, South Africa |
| Kian Tajbakhsh | New York University and Columbia University, New York, USA |
| Jandhyala B G Tilak | Council for Social Development, New Delhi, India |
| Virginius Xaxa | University of Delhi, New Delhi, India |
| S Akbar Zaidi | Institute of Business Administration, Karachi, Pakistan |
Social Change is a peer-reviewed journal which follows a doubly blinded review process.
Full-fledged papers may be of 5,000 to 8,000 words. Brief write-ups of 1,000 to 2,500 words (research reports, commentaries, theoretical notes, and data-based profiles) may also be sent; these will be considered for inclusion in sections titled Commentary and Perspectives & Documents. Responses to an article published in Social Change will be considered for inclusion in the section titled Discussion.
Manuscripts should be submitted in soft copy in MS Word as an attachment to socialchange@csdindia.org . Manuscripts will be considered for publication only if written in accordance with the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (6th edition, 2009).
Authors will be provided with a copyright form once the contribution is accepted for publication. The submission will be considered as final only after the filled-in and signed copyright form is received.
1. Structure
The manuscript should be structured as follows:
- Cover page, showing title of the paper, name of author, author’s affiliation and institutional address with pin code, email id and a 100–150 word abstract. Authors’ names and references should not be used in the text in order to keep authors’ anonymity (e.g., ‘as the author has written elsewhere’ should be avoided). . In case there are two or more authors, then corresponding author’s name and address details must be clearly specified on the first page itself.
- The contributors should also provide 4–5 keywords for online searchability.
- Text should start on a new page, and must not contain the names of authors.
- References should come at the end of the manuscript.
- Tables and figures should be provided in editable format and should be referred to in the text by number separately (e.g., Table 1) not by placement (e.g., see Table below). They should each be submitted on a separate page following the article, numbered and arranged as per their references in the text. They will be inserted in the final text as indicated by the author. Source citations with tables and figures are required irrespective of whether or not they require permissions.
- Figures, including maps, graphs and drawings, should not be larger than page size. They should be numbered and arranged as per their references in the text. All photographs and scanned images should have a resolution of minimum 300 dpi and 1500 pixels and their format should be TIFF or JPEG. Permissions to reprint should be obtained for copyright protected photographs/images. Even for photographs/images available in the public domain, it should be clearly ascertained whether or not their reproduction requires permission for purposes of publishing (The Publisher is a profit-making endeavour). All photographs/scanned images should be provided separately in a folder along with the main article.
- Mathematical formulae, methodological details etc. should be given separately as an appendix, unless their mention in the main body of the text becomes essential.
2. Language
- The language and spellings used should be British (U.K.), with ‘s’ variant, e.g., globalisation instead of globalization, labour instead of labor. For non-English and uncommon words and phrases, use italics only for the first time. Meaning of non-English words should be given in parenthesis just after the word when it is used for the first time.
- Articles should use non-sexist and non-racist language.
- Spell out numbers from one to ninety nine, 100 and above to remain in figures. However, for exact measurement (e.g., China’s GDP growth rate 9.8 per cent) use numbers. Very large round numbers, especially sums of money, may be expressed by a mixture of numerals and spelled-out numbers (India’s population 1.2 billion). Follow thousand, million, billion number metric system instead of lacks and crores.
- Single quotes should be used throughout. Double quote marks are to be used within single quotes. Spellings of words in quotations should not be changed. Quotations of 45 words or more should be separated from the text.
- Notes should be numbered serially and presented at the end of the article. Notes must contain more than a mere reference.
- Use ‘per cent’ instead of % in the text. In tables, graphs etc, % can be used. Use ‘20th century’, ‘1990s’.
- Social Change does not encourage frequent use of capital letters. They should be used selectively and consistently. Only the first word of title and subtitle should start with capitals. Although proper names are capitalised, many words derived from or associated with proper names, as well as the names of significant offices are lowercased. While the names of ethnic, religious and national groups are capitalised (the Muslims, the Gurkhas, the Germans), designations based loosely on colour (black people) and terms denoting socio-economic classes or groups (the middle class, the dalits, the adivasis, the african-american) are lowercased. All caste, tribe and community names (the Santhals, the Jatavs) are to be capitalised but generic terms (the kayasths) are to be lower cased. Civil, military, religious, and professional titles (the president) and institutions (the parliament, the united nations) are to be put in lower case, but names of organisations (the Labour Party, the Students Federation of India) are to be capitalised. The names of political tendencies (the marxists, the socialists) should remain in lower case.
- Abbreviations are spelled out at first occurrence. Very common ones (US, GDP, BBC) need not be spelled out. Other commonly used abbreviations (am, pm, cm, kg, ha) can be used in lower case, without spaces.
3. Citations and References
Guidelines specified in the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (6th edition, 2009) must be followed.
- References: A consolidated listing of all books, articles, essays, theses and documents referred to (including any referred to in the tables, graphs and maps) should be provided at the end of the article.
- Arrangement of references: Reference list entries should be alphabetized by the last name of the first author of each work. In each reference, authors’ names are inverted (last name first) for all authors (first, second or subsequent ones); give the last name and initials for all authors of a particular work unless the work has more than six authors. If the work has more than six authors, list the first six authors and then use et al. after the sixth author’s name.
- Chronological listing: If more than one work by the same author(s) is cited, they should be listed in order by the year of publication, starting with the earliest.
- Sentence case: In references, sentence case (only the first word and any proper noun are capitalized – e.g., ‘The software industry in India’) is to be followed for the titles of papers, books, articles, etc.
- Title case: In references, Journal titles are put in title case (first letter of all words except articles and conjunctions are capitalized – e.g., Journal of Business Ethics).
- Italicize: Book and Journal titles are to be italicized.
- Citations and References should adhere to the guidelines below (based on the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 6th edition). Some examples are given below:
In-text citations:
- One work by one author: (Kessler, 2003, p. 50) or ‘Kessler (2003) found that among the epidemiological samples..’.
- One work by two authors: (Joreskog & Sorborn, 2007, pp. 50–66) or Joreskog and Sorborn (2007) found that..
- One work by three or more authors: (Basu, Banerji & Chatterjee, 2007) [first instance]; Basu et al. (2007) [Second instance onwards].
- Groups or organizations or universities: (University of Pittsburgh, 2007) or University of Pittsburgh (2007).
- Authors with same surname: Include the initials in all the in-text citations even if the year of publication differs, e.g., (I. Light, 2006; M.A. Light, 2008).
- Works with no identified author or anonymous author: Cite the first few words of the reference entry (title) and then the year, e.g., (‘Study finds’, 2007); (Anonymous, 1998).
If abbreviations are provided, then the style to be followed is: (National Institute of Mental Health [NIMH], 2003) in the first citation and (NIMH, 2003) in subsequent citations. - Two or more works by same author: (Gogel, 1990, 2006, in press)
- Two or more works with different authors: (Gogel, 1996; Miller, 1999)
- Secondary sources: Allport's diary (as cited in Nicholson, 2003).
- Films: (Name of the Director, Year of release)
References:
- Books:
Patnaik, Utsa (2007). The republic of hunger. New Delhi: Three Essays Collective.
- Edited Books:
Amanor, Kojo S., & Moyo, S. (Eds) (2008). Land and sustainable development in Africa. London and New York: Zed Books.
- Translated books:
Amin, S. (1976). Unequal development (trans. B. Pearce). London and New York: Monthly Review Press.
- Book chapters:
Chachra, S. (2011). The national question in India. In S. Moyo and P. Yeros (Eds), Reclaiming the nation (pp. 67–78). London and New York: Pluto Press.
- Journal articles:
Foster, J.B. (2010). The financialization of accumulation. Monthly Review, 62(5), 1-17. doi: 10.1037/0278-6133.24.2.225 [DOI number optional]
- Newsletter article, no author:
Six sites meet for comprehensive anti-gang intiative conference. (2006, November/December). OOJDP News @ a Glance. Retrieved from http://www.ncrjs.gov/html
[Please do not place a period at the end of an online reference.]
- Newspaper article:
Schwartz, J. (1993, September 30). Obesity affects economic, social status. The Washington Post, pp. A1, A4.
- In-press article:
Briscoe, R. (in press). Egocentric spatial representation in action and perception. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. Retrieved from http://cogprints.org/5780/1/ECSRAP.F07.pdf
- Non-English reference book, title translated into English:
Real Academia Espanola. (2001). Diccionario de la lengua espanola [Dictionary of the Spanish Language] (22nd ed.). Madrid, Spain: Author.
- Special issue or section in a journal:
Haney, C., & Wiener, R.L. (Eds) (2004). Capital punishment in the United States [Special Issue]. Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 10(4), 1-17.
Publication ethics
SAGE is committed to upholding the integrity of the academic record. We encourage authors to refer to the Committee on Publication Ethics’ International Standards for Authors and view the Publication Ethics page on the SAGE Author Gateway