Africa Peace and Conflict Network - site, listserv, journal & call for papers

 

You are all are invited to register for the Africa Peace and Conflict Network (APCN) at africapeace.org and to use the link on the Contact Us page to subscribe to the Network's email listserv.

 

The site features a rapidly growing variety of content (check out the podcast, photo-essays, etc) + other resources.

See also the research papers, book+film reviews, analytical commentaries, etc.  

 

We welcome quality submissions (author guidelines on africapeace.org) of the above and also practitioner, policymaker + trainer reflections, conference/workshop/training reports,  and audio, video, pictoral+mixed media pieces. Themed artwork + computer programming also welcome.

 

Re-publication also possible, so also send us non-restricted, salient material.

 

Submissions to APCN are a great way to obtain incisive feedback on one's work and to publish it in a peer-reviewed forum with a large + growing, diverse global audience of scholars, practitioners, policymakers, activists + concerned citizens from the general public.

 

 

Submissions are also eligible for APCN's refereed print journal, African Conflicts and Peacebuilding Review (ACPR, republication of its material not allowed, http://inscribe.iupress.org/loi/acp).

 

ACPR is a double-blind refereed print journal published by Indiana University Press, and we are currently assembling the first issue. Submissions + subscriptions welcome (http://inscribe.iupress.org/loi/acp).

 

ACPR's distinguished International Editorial Board includes scholars  and practitioners from the UN and other institutions. In addition to research articles, there is ongoing acceptance of an unusually broad variety of materials, including shorter pieces like review essays, conference reports, and commentaries on important developments in African peace and conflict. ACPR's lens is wide, encompassing issues such as conflict prevention, post-conflict reintegration, humanitarian assistance, legal issues, social justice, economic conflict drivers and peacemaking incentives, governance, and more. The peace/conflict implications should be explicit.

 

An online supplement features multimedia, e.g. photo essays, photographs, audio/video files, etc. Consult africapeace.org for a snapshot of the types of material accepted.

 

ACPR will be archived at JSTOR and indexed widely. Individual and institutional subscription orders are welcome.

 

We hope to hear from you soon, and please spread the word about these new  developments and opportunities,

 

For more info, contact Mark Davidheiser at  mdavidhe@africapeace.org

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I suggest you check out the Peace, Conflict & Development Network, also on ning. You will find more material on conflict in Africa there.

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