Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Organization Studies: At a Critical Age: The Social and Political Organization of Age and Ageing
Deadline: January 31, 2013
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Organization Studies: At a Critical Age: The Social and Political Organization of Age and Ageing
Deadline: January 31, 2013
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of the International Journal of Disability, Community & Rehabilitation: What Sorts of People Should There Be?
Guest Editor
Gregor Wolbring, Community Rehabilitation and Disability Studies, Dept. of Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary
Throughout history, people with non-normative abilities have been judged. Sometimes this judgment led to positive consequences, however for the most part these non-normative abilities were judged negatively and the carriers of such non-normative abilities experienced disabling treatment. This very judgment (ableism) and its disabling consequences is one of the main areas of scholarly work within the realm of disability studies. Eugenics, the practice of finding ways to better heritable abilities of humans, is one dynamic that influences the judgment of people’s abilities and the disabling consequences and vice versa.
What sorts of people should there be is a question that has been asked and answered in different ways throughout human history, is still a question asked and answered today and will be with us also for some time in the future.
Advances in science and technology will allow new judgments and actions linked to the sentiment around the question of what sorts of people there should be.
In partnership with the SSHRC-CURA-funded project “Living Archives on Eugenics in Western Canada” (eugenicsarchive.ca), the Editors of IJDCR would like to devote a special issue on this topic.
We invite potential contributors, regardless of fields of study (discipline), to submit 250-word abstracts that articulate the conceptual arguments and knowledge base to be covered in a critical analysis on various aspects from history to future of “What sorts of people should there be”.
Please submit abstracts to the Guest Editor via e-mail at gwolbrin[at]ucalgary.ca by 15 July, 2012
From selected abstracts, we will request full articles of 3000-5000 words (excluding figures and tables) of original research and scholarship on a range of topics to be submitted to the editor by 15 October 2012. Note that an invitation to submit an article does not guarantee its publication.
Every submitted article will be subject to blind peer review and recommendations arising.
As to possible areas linked to the theme the below is a sample list of possible topics
What sorts of people should be born
What sorts of people should live
What sorts of people should be citizens
What sorts of people should compete
What sorts of people….
We invite authors to investigate the history, contemporary use and potential future exhibition of the relationships between the core question “What sorts of people should there be” and such issues as:
disabled people and what it means to be ‘disabled’,
the community around them
practitioners, consumers and researchers linked to the disability discourse
community rehabilitation and the rehabilitation field in general
inclusive education and the education of disabled people in general
the future of education
employability of disabled people
citizenship of disabled people
global citizenship
body image of disabled people
medical and social health policies and their impact on disabled people
health care for disabled people
elderly people, youthism and ageism
disabled people in low income countries
laws and international conventions related to disabled people such as the UN Convention on the rights of persons with disabilities
the concept of personhood
concept of health and health care
the measure of disability adjusted life years and other measurements used to guide health care dollar allocation
quality of life assessment
history
future
science and technology governance
science and technology assessment
ethics
enhancement
For more information about the International Journal of Disability, Community & Rehabilitation (IJDCR) please go to http://www.ijdcr.ca.
International Journal of Disability, Community & Rehabilitation
www.ijdcr.ca
Call for Papers: Policy, Politics, & Nursing Practice
Get published! Submit your manuscript to Policy, Politics, & Nursing Practice
Benefits of Publishing in this Journal
Rigorous peer review of your work
Prompt publishing
Guaranteed targeted, multidisciplinary audience
High visibility for maximum global exposure
Now Indexed in MEDLINE!
Policy, Politics & Nursing Practice (PPNP) is a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal that explores the multiple relationships between nursing and health policy. PPNP serves as a major source of data-based study, policy analysis and discussion on timely, relevant policy issues for nurses in a broad variety of roles and settings, and for others who are interested in nursing-related policy issues.
Submit Manuscripts in these Areas
You are invited to submit your manuscript on a broad variety of topics and issues, including (but not limited to):
Impact of health system change and health reform on nurses and nursing practice;
Legislation and regulations affecting the nursing workforce and nurses’ practice environments;
Nurses’ roles as policy-makers--as legislators, agency officials, advocates and political leaders;
The roles of nursing organizations in shaping policy nationally and globally;
Policy issues currently under debate in the nursing profession;
Advancing solutions to health care disparities;
Health care financing and reimbursement issues;
Comparative analysis of global nursing issues;
Policy issues related to interdisciplinary practice, education and regulation.
We welcome research-based articles, commentary, policy analysis, discussion, book and film reviews and letters to the editor.
Call for Papers: Health Policy and Technology
Health Policy and Technology (HPT), a new journal from the Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine (FPM), has been launched in March 2012 as a cross-disciplinary journal, which will focus on past, present and future health policy and the role of technology in clinical and non-clinical national and international health environments. HPT is published on the FPM's behalf by Elsevier, a major international scientific, technical and medical publisher (see the Elsevier press release about the new journal).
The FPM continues to publish its first international publication, the Postgraduate Medical Journal, launched in 1925. HPT provides a further excellent way for the FPM to continue to make important national and international contributions to development of policy and practice within medicine and related disciplines. The aim of the FPM in establishing this new international journal is to publish relevant, timely and accessible articles and commentaries to support policy-makers, health professionals, health technology providers, patient groups and academia interested in health policy and technology.
Topics covered by HPT will include
- Health technology, including drug discovery, diagnostics, medicines, devices, therapeutic delivery and eHealth systems
- Cross-national comparisons on health policy using evidence-based approaches
- National studies on health policy to determine the outcomes of technology-driven initiatives
- Cross-border eHealth including health tourism
- The digital divide in mobility, access and affordability of healthcare
- Health technology assessment (HTA) methods and tools for evaluating the effectiveness of clinical and non-clinical health technologies
- Health and eHealth indicators and benchmarks (measure/metrics) for understanding the adoption and diffusion of health technologies
- Health and eHealth models and frameworks to support policy-makers and other stakeholders in decision-making
- Stakeholder engagement with health technologies (clinical and patient/citizen buy-in)
- Regulation and health economics
For more information about the new journal go to: http://www.healthpolicyandtechnology.org
Call for Papers: Emerging Adulthood Journal
Submit your research to Emerging Adulthood, a new journal coming in 2013!
Benefits of Publishing in this Journal
When you publish in Emerging Adulthood, you will benefit from:
Rigorous peer review of your research
Prompt publishing
Targeted, multidisciplinary audience
High visibility for maximum global exposure
Emerging Adulthood (EA) is an interdisciplinary and international journal for advancements in theory, methodology, and empirical research on development and adaptation during the late teens and twenties. EA covers clinical, developmental and social psychology and other social sciences, including anthropology, psychiatry, public policy, social work, sociology, public health, and post-secondary education. EA embraces the use of both qualitative and quantitative methodology.
Submit Manuscripts in these Areas
You are invited to submit your manuscript and articles on emerging adulthood research topics/areas, including (but not limited to):
Interpersonal Relationships
Work and Education
Well-Being
Social and Moral Competence
Health
Identity
Psychopathology
Ethnicity/Culture
Religion
Media and Technology
Transitions
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of the Journal of Health & Productivity: Health and Productivity on the Workplace: the Relationship between Payer, Provider and Policy Maker in Oncology and Hematology
The deadline for submission is September 1, 2012.
The Journal of Health & Productivity (JHP) published by InPress Media Group for the Institute for Health and Productivity (IHPM) publishes current research and debate on all aspects of employee health and productivity.
The Journal of Health & Productivity aims to be the leading multidisciplinary publication offering peer-reviewed high quality original research and review articles with real relevance to payers, providers, policy makers and employers. The Journal provides corporate decision makers critically examined evidence applicable to their own issues concerning employee health and its impact on productivity.
Led by Editor-in-Chief William B. Bunn III, MD, JD, MPH, vice president of Health, Safety, Security and Productivity at Navistar International, the Journal’s Editorial Advisory Board of leading academic researchers and industry experts ensures that the publication is a must-read for researchers and practitioners concerned with the health and productivity of the workforce.
Reaching more than 12,000 senior executives via print and more than 9,500 electronically, the Journal of Health & Productivity heavily penetrates the market it serves, including corporate employee coalitions, business associations, health plans, providers and government agencies.
The Journal of Health & Productivity (JHP) publishes:
Peer-reviewed research articles on all aspects of employee health and productivity;
Practical advice via in-depth case studies, presenting simple practical solutions to employee health and productivity problems
Real-life implications for the individual, the employer, and public health systems in general
Policies, processes, systems and governance issues related to cost-effective health and productivity programs for employers.
Call for papers: Oncology & Hematology Special
The Journal of Health & Productivity (JHP) is planning to advance Journal of Health & Productivity further by publishing a special peer-reviewed issue addressing the topics relevant to the employer/payer and provider relationship in oncology and hematology.
Based on ongoing response from its members, the IHPM recognizes that there is an unfilled need for authoritative, peer reviewed, information about health and productivity related to oncology and hematology.
The Journal of Health & Productivity is seeking original work to facilitate understanding of the often divergent perspectives of payers, providers, policy makers and employers, presenting relevant – must-read – information that will enhance decisions made by providers, payers, and policy makers.
The Journal of Health & Productivity will be addressing unique oncology and hematology topics relevant to executives concerned about the health and productivity of their employees.
The overall goal of the Journal is to improve employee healthcare in the oncology and hematology.
The editors of the Journal of Health & Productivityare seeking original research articles and informed commentary on the following topics:
Cancer in the workplace: prevalence and economic impact
Measuring the economic burden of cancer
The impact of cancer and hematological disorders on workplace health and productivity
The psychosocial impact of cancer and hematological disorders and the effect on employee productivity
Lost productive time associated with cancer and hematological disorders
Measuring outcomes and quality of care and the impact on employee productivity
Cost of new therapeutic agents and impact on patients, employees, providers and employers
Effects of innovative models of care, care delivery, and quality of care on employee health and productivity
Effects of healthcare reform on cancer care – and how this impacts employers and employees
Methodologies for accountability of payers and providers in oncology/hematology and the effect on employers and employees
Effect on employee health and productivity of health promotion and care delivery models in oncology/hematology
Improving functional health of employees with cancer and their impact on total labor costs
Impact of new economic models on oncology care – and the effect on employee productivity
Effects of healthcare reform on cancer care on employee health and productivity
Impact of plan design on patient access to appropriate therapies
The benefit of integrating evidence-based guidelines into practice on employee health and productivity
Innovative collaboration between payers, providers, policy-makers and the effect on workplace health and productivity
Advances in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer and the impact on employee health and productivity
Cancer survivorship, late treatment-related side effects (physical, psychosocial and cognitive abnormalities) and employee health and productivity
How to submit
Preference will be given to high quality original research and review articles. Contributors are encouraged to report on current research, clarifying the practical implications on employee health and productivity of their work in order to increase understanding and provide a platform for further research and development.
All submitted papers will undergo the standard peer-review process required by Journal of Health & Productivity. Due to space constraints, please limit the text to 4500 words and the graphic elements to a combined total of 6 tables and figures. Final decisions regarding inclusion in this special issue rest solely with the Editors.
Please send your manuscript to:
Peter Hofland, PhD
Publisher and Executive Editor Journal of Health & Productivity
InPress Media Group, LLC
4960 South Gilbert Road, Suite 1286
Chandler, AZ 85249
editor@inpressmediagroup.com
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Developing World Bioethics: Ethics and Treatment Access Activism: Courts, Health Policy and Health Economics
Guest Editors: Maurice Cassier, Marilena Correa
Closing date for submissions: 15 September 2012
This Special Issue of Developing World Bioethics will focus on the emergence of ethical analyses pertaining to impoverished patients’ access to medical care and to medicines. The main focus of this issue will be on the fight against HIV/AIDS and the “neglected” diseases of the last two decades. New ethical understandings have been developed in different contexts and expressed in governmental health policies, and through tribunals, public discussion forums, patients association claims, humanitarian organizations and funds, research programs, governmental health departments, international health organizations, etc. In each case, what is at stake are norms such as equity, as well as equality and justice, which provide an important foundation for individual and collective forms of activism as well as governmental actions. The Special Issue of Developing World Bioethics aims at bringing about a critical discussion of the variegated ethical arguments for improving access to treatment and medicines, which have been put forward by different social actors.
The editors welcome early discussion of brief proposals and/or abstracts by email. Papers can be sent to Maurice Cassier and Marilena Correa.
Upon submission authors should include full contact details and a few lines of autobiographical information in a separate electronic file. We discourage papers of more than 5000 words.
For further submission requirements, format and referencing style, refer to the Author Guidelines http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291471-8847/homepage/ForAuthors.html
Manuscripts should be submitted to Developing World Bioethics online at: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/dwb.
Please ensure that you select manuscript type ‘Special Issue’.
Maurice Cassier is a sociologist and economist
Senior researcher at CNRS ; directeur d´etudes EHESS.
CERMES
Site CNRS, 7, rue Guy Môquet.
VILLEJUIF Cedex 94801.
FRANCE
Marilena Corrêa MD, PhD in sociology of health
Full Professor at the Institute of Social Medecine of the State University of Rio de Janeiro (IMS-UERJ)
Instituto de Medicina Social
Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro
Rua São Francisco Xavier 524, 7 andar, bloco D
Rio de Janeiro RJ zip code 20559.990
BRAZIL
Call for Journal Manuscripts: Teaching and Learning in Nursing
Teaching and Learning in Nursing is the official publication of the National Organization for Associate Degree Nursing (N-OADN) and is designed for associate degree nursing educators as a source of information about
associate degree nursing education, practice, administration, and research;
resources that will enhance associate degree nursing education and practice;
professional development for associate degree nurse educators and the individuals they teach;
content presented at the annual convention of the Organization; and
other activities of the Organization.
We are looking for manuscripts on the following topics:
Managing different learning styles
New faculty mentoring
Legal issues
Research
Legislative issues
Instructional design strategies
Leadership, management roles
Unique funding for programs and faculty
All new manuscripts must be submitted through the Teaching and Learning in Nursing online submission and review website (http://ees.elsevier.com/teln). Authors are requested to submit the text, tables, and artwork in electronic form (not as a PDF) to this address. In an accompanying letter, authors should state that the manuscript, or parts of it, have not been and will not be submitted elsewhere for publication. Please visit http://ees.elsevier.com/teln to view the Guide for Authors for additional information about submitting a manuscript.
Editorial Policy
Manuscripts are considered for publication if they are submitted only to this journal and the author has not published similar topics elsewhere. Editorial correspondence and manuscripts should be addressed to:
Maris Lown, EdD, RN
Editor, Teaching and Learning in Nursing
c/o Brookdale Community College
765 Newman Springs Road
Lincroft, NJ 07760
mlown@brookdalecc.edu
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Research on Social Work Practice on the Topic of A Critical Appraisal of the DSM-5: Social Work Perspectives
Guest Editor: Jeffrey R. Lacasse, Ph.D.
Submission Deadline: March 1, 2013
Research on Social Work Practice (RSWP) announces a call for papers to appear in a special issue of the journal dedicated to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, version 5 (DSM-5). The DSM-5 is scheduled to be released in May of 2013, and will have an important impact on mental health research and practice alike. The journal seeks papers that will contribute to the ongoing scholarly debate regarding the DSM and psychiatric classification and their effects on clients and the public, clinical practice, social/health policy, and mental health research. For this special issue, we are seeking not only empirical work as is usually the custom at RSWP, but also systematic reviews of the empirical literature, critical assessments, and conceptual analyses of the DSM-5. Interdisciplinary-authored papers are welcome.
Suggested topics include:
• The development of the DSM-5, including methodological, political, sociological, and epistemological analyses
• Critical assessment of the concept of mental disorder as defined in DSM-5
• Systematic reviews of the reliability and/or validity of major categories of DSM-5-defined disorders, including any published or unpublished field trials of the forthcoming DSM-5 criteria
• Discussions of categorical versus dimensional approaches to mental disorder;
• Arguments for or against DSM-5 as compared to alternative nosological systems, such as the International Classification of Diseases, Version 10
• Alternatives to the categorical system of the DSM, such as functional analysis used by behavioral practitioners
• The role of supplemental methods of assessment, such as the NASW's Person-in-Environment (PIE) assessment system, the Psychodynamic Diagnostic Manual, or methods of family assessment
We will also review papers on other topics related to DSM-5.
All papers are subject to blind peer-review. The deadline for paper submissions is March 1, 2013. The issue will be published in late summer/early fall of 2013. Potential authors may contact the guest editor to discuss ideas for submissions. All submissions must be formatted in strict compliance with current APA style, with empirical research papers also being in compliance with the Journal Article Reporting Standards found on pp. 247-248 of the APA Manual.
Contact Information:
Jeffrey R. Lacasse, MSW, Ph.D.
School of Social Work
College of Public Programs
Arizona State University
411 N. Central Avenue
Mail Code 3920
Phoenix, AZ, 85004-0689
jeffrey.lacasse@asu.edu
(602) 496-0067
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of the International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics: Aging and Long-Term Care
The deadline for submission for this issue is September 15, 2012.
Guest Editors: Lisa A. Eckenwiler and Carol Levine
The past several decades have seen significant improvement in the health of older adults. In the United States and many other parts of the world, people are living longer and with less chronic disability than ever before. The aging population is burgeoning. While currently the proportion of older persons is 17 percent, by 2050 it is expected to be 26 percent. The oldest old, or those eighty and above, will increase from being just 1.4 percent of the population to 4.3 percent. The elderly, and especially the oldest old, are disproportionately women. Their caregivers are also disproportionately women, as family care is the predominant mode of care. Projections further suggest that elderly populations in many developing countries are growing more rapidly than those in affluent ones. Nearly 250 million of the approximately 420 million people over sixty-five live in developing countries, and expectations are that the majority will live there in coming decades. Compared to wealthier countries, these mostly low and middle-income countries will undergo this demographic shift quite quickly, even as they continue to contend with the burden of diseases like HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis, and with considerably less in the way of resources, including human resources.
These changing demographics generate a greater need for long-term care, whether that is provided in the home, in community settings, or in institutions. While there has been considerable debate concerning the nature and extent of future long-term care needs, especially given declining rates of disability in recent decades, the consensus is that they will grow. While governments, global health organizations like the WHO and PAHO, and other agents have acknowledged the importance of addressing current and coming demands related to aging and long-term care, the current state of the dependent elderly and of long-term care systems around the world are, on the whole, fragile and in urgent need of attention. Moreover, analyses and recommendations that are informed by feminist approaches are largely lacking.
This special issue of IJFAB aims to contribute to the ongoing conversations around ethics and policy in aging and long-term care. We invite essays written from a feminist perspective on any topic related to aging and long-term care. Possible topics include:
What characterizes a feminist approach to aging and/or long-term care and what contributions can it make to theory and policy?
How do feminist views about "family" affect long-term care approaches?
What is the structure of income provision for the aged in a particular country or region and what are its ethical implications?
What are the ethical implications of different kinds of support systems for the dependent elderly?
How is long-term care labor gendered and what ethical concerns does this raise?
How can a feminist vision of long-term care accommodate cultural and religious traditions that place special responsibilities for long-term care on women and girls?
What are the implications of the feminization of labor migration on the provision of long-term care needs around the world?
What is the structure of labor and or economic policy in a given country or region and what are its ethical implications for family caregivers?
How are representations of old age gendered and "performed" in the media and in the arts, and what are the ethical and health implications?
Submission instructions for authors are available at http://www.ijfab.org/style_guidelines.html
Papers should be submitted in Microsoft Word format as email attachments to IJFAB@sunysb.edu.
The submission deadline for this issue is September 15, 2012.