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Publishing Resources
1. Journal Quality List - Compiled and edited by Dr. Anne-Wil Harzing
The Journal Quality List is a collation of 16 different rankings of 861 journals. It is published primarily to assist academics to target papers at journals of an appropriate standard. The Journal Quality List comprises academic journals in the following broad areas: Economics, Finance, Accounting, Management, and Marketing.
2. Research Methods Bookshelf - Compiled by CRGP Staff
The Research Methods Bookshelf is an aggregation of methodological handbooks for qualitative and quantitative data collection and analysis. It is compiled primarily to aid researchers in the selection of appropriate methods for field studies. The Research Methods Bookshelf includes books with the following emphases: experimental design, case study, ethnography, grounded theory, phenomenology, statistical inference, and qualitative analysis.
3. Emerald for Authors - Online Resources for New Writers
How to write publishable papers - by Abby Day
Editing Service, Internet Resources, Authors' Promotional Toolkit
4. What Theory Is? What Theory is Not? - Compiled by CRGP Staff
Novice writers especially have a difficult time understanding how to tackle the challenges of developing new theory. The following articles explain how to evaluate and critique existing theory, and how to develop and publish new and original theoretical contributions.
Bacharach, S. (1989) Organizational Theories - Some Criteria for Evaluation. Academy of
Management Review, 14(4): 496-515.
Christensen, C. & Raynor, M. (2003) Why Hard-Nosed Executives Should Care About
Management Theory. Harvard Business Review (September): 67-74.
DiMaggio, P. (1995) Comments on "What Theory is Not". Administrative Science Quarterly 40: 391-397.
Gans, J. & Shepherd G. (1994). How Are the Mighty Fallen: Rejected Classic Articles by Leading Economists. Journal of Economic Perspectives 8(1): 165-179.
Locke K. & Golden-Biddle K. (1997) Constructing Opportunities for Contribution: Structuring Intertextual Coherence and "Problematizing" in Organizational Studies. Academy of Management Journal (40)5: 1023-1062.
Poole, M. & Van de Ven, A. (1989) Using Paradox to Build Management and
Organization Theories. Academy of Management Review, 14(4): 562-578.
Sutton, R. & Staw B. (1995) What Theory is Not, Administrative Science Quarterly, 40: 371-384.
Weick, K. (1989) Theory Construction as Disciplined Imagination. Academy of
Management Review, 14(4): 516-531.
Whetten, D. (1989) What Constitutes a Theoretical Contribution? Academy of Management Review, 14(4): 490-495.
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