Archives:Proceedings of the IEEE “Scanning Our Past” call for authors

From ETHW
Revision as of 02:07, 29 March 2016 by Administrator7 (talk | contribs) (Proceedings of the IEEE “Scanning the Past” call for authors)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Historians and historical researchers are invited to propose papers for publication in Proceedings of the IEEE. As the IEEE’s flagship technical journal, ProcIEEE is the most highly cited general-interest journal in electrical, electronic, and computer engineering. Every month it publishes peer-reviewed papers on technical topics of broad significance and long-term interest. Readers are also interested in papers that explore the history of technology and the people associated with it, which are featured in its “Scanning the Past” section.

These articles should be between 3,500 and 4,500 words including references, and should include 3-4 illustrations. Since papers in Proceedings are read largely by engineers and technologists, historical papers should be accessible not only to the expert in that technology but to technical professionals seeking social, political, economic, technical, or cultural contexts for the causes, processes, or consequences of technological change. Since readers are not academic historians, historiographical issues can be largely bypassed in order to focus on a specific question or story.

“Scanning the Past” articles are also peer-reviewed and fulfill a number of purposes: promotion of a recent book to a receptive audience; publication of new or additional research or a conference paper that does not fit the needs of scholarly historical journals; and fulfillment of an interest in disseminating high-quality public history.

Authors can submit a one-page proposal to editor Vaishali Damle, v.damle@ieee.org, containing a description of the topic and its relevance to Proceedings readers; an outline of the proposed paper and its approach; and a brief biography showing the author’s qualifications for writing the paper. To demonstrate the appeal of the topic beyond a narrow audience, proposals should include citations that show its connections to broader subjects.

Proceedings is copyrighted to protect the interests of IEEE as well as those of its authors. Authors must provide a signed copyright release form before their papers can be published; the completed form should accompany the manuscript upon its approval and final submission. More information can be found at [IEEE Intellectual Property Rights][1].