Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-vfjqv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T14:20:23.320Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Editors’ Corner

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 January 2018

Phillip Ardoin
Affiliation:
Appalachian State University
Paul Gronke
Affiliation:
Reed College
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Editors’ Corner
Copyright
Copyright © American Political Science Association 2018 

Welcome to the 51st volume of PS: Political Science & Politics! We are excited to announce that we have been reappointed to a second term as coeditors of the journal. We would like to thank the review committee, the publications committee of the APSA Council, and the council for endorsing our proposal to serve a second term. We also want to thank our editorial board which has been expanded and reinvigorated. Our board meeting at the APSA Annual Meeting was the best attended in our term as editors, and we had an active and lively discussion over our editorial policies and content categories.

Our reappointment included a mandate to continue to work on a number of initiatives intended to diversify our content and author pool and to clarify some of our editorial policies. We have begun these discussions with our editorial board and the publications committee and will begin to push out these changes to our readership.

We have been asked to assure that our Symposia and Spotlights, some of the most popular content areas in PS, are accessible to all scholars. In response, we are considering adding a requirement for an “open call” policy for proposed symposia. While the details of this change still need to be worked out, this change would mean Symposium and Spotlight proposals would no longer consist of a pre-determined set of papers, but would identify and justify an area of coverage and include a system for managing an open call. Alternatively, we may allow for proposals with an established list of papers, but require a statement of outreach efforts to younger scholars and scholars from underrepresented groups.

Another major change we have been asked to implement is to move to “First View.” Scholars may not realize the version of an article published on First View must be the version of record, meaning there can be no changes between the First View version and the version that appears in print. The unique production features of PS (e.g., our use of “pull quotes” and other special formatting) makes First View more challenging to implement, but we have worked to adapt our production workflow. We are rolling out First View with this issue.

This January issue has several outstanding Symposia and Spotlights addressing contemporary politics and important issues to the profession.

William D. Hicks and Carol Weissert’s Spotlight, “Home Rule Be Damned: Exploring Policy Conflicts between the Statehouse and City Hall” addresses the growing tensions between state and local governments across the country and the significant policy and political implications of these conflicts.

Charles Crabtree and Christian Davenport’s Spotlight, “Contentious Politics in the Trump Era” examines recent events in American politics through the lens of the contentious politics literature, providing new insights and directions for future research.

Frances Lee’s symposium on the APSA congressional fellows provides reflections on the APSA Congressional Fellowship Program and highlights the diversity of work and research by the most recent class of fellows.

Mathew Manweller and David Lublin organized a set of articles by political scientists who have run for and been elected to political office. In many ways, it is a follow-up to our previous symposium by Carl Klarner, “Beyond the Ivory Tower: Political Science Careers Outside Academia” (49:3). It’s fascinating to read what lessons political scientists took to their experiences in elective office, and in how many ways politics is very different from political science.

Finally, we want to thank Barbara Walthall for her many years of service, previously as managing editor of PS, and subsequently as Director of Publications for the association. Barbara tutored us, hectored us, and ultimately became our partner in editing PS for our first year, and was instrumental in training Celina Szymanski as our current managing editor. Her presence in our professional lives is ending, but our personal connections remain.

Her successor, Jon Gurstelle, joins APSA from John Wiley & Sons. We have invited Jon to write a brief introductory essay about publication, citations, and the best way to title your articles so that they attract a wider readership (short version: titles do matter!) which will appear in our April issue. Welcome to Jon!