Chatham House: Independent thinking on international affairs

Guidelines for contributors

We welcome unsolicited articles. Authors may expect to hear a decision within three months of acknowledgment. All articles are independently and confidentially refereed. Articles should be original and should not be under consideration elsewhere. They should be submitted to the editor (csoper@chathamhouse.org) in a Word document with an abstract summarizing the main points of the article and a note about the author.

Articles should not exceed 7,500 words, including footnotes. These should be kept to manageable proportions, and be presented in a list at the end of the article. Authors are asked to write clearly and economically and to avoid academic or technical jargon as International Affairs spans a wide range of fields. Acronyms should be spelt out in full when used for the first time.

International Affairs Style Guidelines

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Where not specified, follow the Concise Oxford dictionary, Hart's rules, and the Oxford dictionary for writers and editors. Whenever in doubt, refer to Judith Butcher, Copy-editing.

Notes for Book Reviewers

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Footnotes:

Footnotes should include the following information: author name; title of work; (for a book) place of publication, publisher, date and page reference; (for an article) journal title, issue number, year and page reference. Please avoid ibid., loc. cit. and use short titles to refer to works already cited: e.g. Henry Kissinger, A world restored: Metternich, Castlereagh and the problems of peace, becomes Kissinger, A world restored. Footnotes should be presented as follows:

Books:

Robert Service, Russia: experiment with a people (London: Pan Macmillan, 2002), p. 103.
Subsequent mentions: Service, Russia, p. 420.

Articles:

Stanley Hoffman, 'US-European relations: past and future', International Affairs 79:5, October 2003, pp. 1029-1044.
Subsequent mentions: Hoffman, 'US-European relations', p. 1035.

Articles in books:

Laurence D. Weiler, 'No first use: a history', in David N. Schwarz, ed., NATO's nuclear dilemmas (Washington DC: Brookings, 1983).
Subsequent mentions: Weiler, 'No first use'.

Authors will be sent proofs of articles for checking on the understanding that they must return them within four days of receipt. 25 offprints will be supplied free of charge on publication. Contributors of accepted articles will be asked to assign copyright to the Royal Institute of International Affairs.

COPYRIGHT:

All rights reserved. With the exception of fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior permission in writing of Chatham House, or in accordance with the terms of photocopying licences issued by organizations authorized by Chatham House to administer reprographic reproduction rights. Authorization to photocopy items for educational classroom use is granted by Chatham House provided the appropriate fee is paid directly to the Copyright Clearance Centre, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, USA from which clearance should be obtained in advance. Institutions with a paid subscription to this journal may make photocopies for teaching purposes free of charge provided such copies are not resold. For further information see CCC Online at www.copyright.com.

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