The Journal of Business Chemistry:
Editorial Policies and Practices
The Journal of Business Chemistry is published
by the Institute of Business Administration at the University
of Muenster Department of Chemistry and Pharmacy. It
is published every four months in both print and electronic
versions. Information about the journal is available
on-line at: http://www.businesschemistry.org.
Editorial
policies are the responsibility of the Editor-in-Chief
and the Executive Editors under the general authority
of the Institute of Business Administration.
The Journal of Business Chemistry publishes
original, refereed material concerned with all aspects
of business chemistry. It is devoted to developing theories
and practices of management and leadership in the chemical
industry; the journal is designed to appeal to both
practicing managers and academics.
The Journal of Business Chemistry publishes
papers based on original research that are judged, after
review, to make a substantial contribution to the understanding
of any area of business chemistry or closely related
areas in strategic management. Manuscripts may be submitted
for consideration as:
- Research Papers
- Papers for the
Practitioner's Section
- Comments
Research Papers
Research Papers are original
academic and scientific reports whose conclusions represent
a substantial advance in understanding of an important
business-chemical problem or business theory. If Regular
Papers have no theoretical impact they should have immediate,
far-reaching implications on practical management problems
within the chemical industry.
Authors are urged to keep the
length of Regular Papers to 10.000 words of manuscript including an abstract of max. 150 words.
Practitioner's Section
These articles are reports
of tangible chemical or business problems within the
industry. They do not need academic or theoretical background
– they rather provide solutions and real life business
examples.
Authors are urged to keep the
length of the papers between 5.000 and 8.000 words including an abstract of max. 100 words.
Comments
Comments are
short statements regarding current research/business
problems or previous articles of the Journal of Business
Chemistry. They should encourage the scientific discussion
and state the personal opinion of the author.
Authors are urged
to keep the length of the papers between 1.500 and 3.000 words.
General Conditions
As a condition of publication,
all authors must transfer copyright to the Institute
of Business Administration at the University of Muenster.
Manuscripts submitted under multiple authorship are
reviewed on the assumption that all listed authors concur
in the submission and that the final version of the
manuscript has been seen and approved by all authors.
Authors of papers published
in the Journal of Business Chemistry are obligated to honor any
reasonable request by qualified investigators for materials
or theories used to obtain the published results (e.g.
calculation models).
Reviewing Process
All manuscripts submitted to
the Journal of Business Chemistry are reviewed critically. It
is the responsibility of the Editor-in-Chief, the Executive
Editors, and the Editorial Board to determine their
suitability for publication. After receipt of a manuscript
of a regular paper by the Editorial Office, it is sent
to an Executive Editor who usually assigns it to one
or two anonymous reviewers. The Board members then make
a definitive recommendation for acceptance, revision,
or declination based on the scientific/academic merit
and quality of the studies reported. Referees may be
consulted when additional expertise is required; decisions
on manuscripts are usually made on the basis of a peer-review.
All Board members and referees
who review a manuscript remain unknown to the authors.
Every manuscript is treated by the Editors and referees
as privileged information, and they are instructed to
exclude themselves from review of any manuscript that
might involve a conflict of interest or the appearance
thereof.
The primary criteria for judging
the acceptability of a manuscript are its originality
and academic or practical importance. Manuscripts judged
lacking in these respects will be declined. If a manuscript is not recommended
for publication by one of the reviewers, the Executive
Editor can decline it without further review. In some
instances, the Executive Editor may also seek a second/third
opinion from another reviewer but is not obligated to
do so.
Guidelines for Editorial Decisions
The members of the Editorial
Board use flexible guidelines, set forth below, to assist
them in making editorial decisions.
The primary criteria for judging
the acceptability of a manuscript are originality and
scientific/academic importance.
Manuscripts failing to deal
with management issues in a chemical context in the
widest range (including biotechnology or similar industries)
are usually inappropriate for the Journal of Business Chemistry. In the absence of novelty
and scientific significance, strategic management relevance
or innovation potential alone will not be considered
sufficient to justify publication. |