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Editors' Notes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 2009

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Abstract

Type
EDITORS NOTE
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Copyright © The Economic History Association 2009

EDITORS' REPORT, SEPTEMBER 2008

The past twelve months have witnessed great change at the Journal of Economic History. At the end of June, Jeremy Atack stepped down as co-editor, after four years of exemplary service to the Journal and the Association. For the Journal, he has been a model editor, and for me, a source of sage advice. He will be sorely missed.

His place has been taken by Price Fishback, who left the editorial board to become co-editor in the American office. That office also has Brendan Livingston replacing Linda Carter as assistant editor and Paul Rhode taking over for William Collins, who did an excellent job of handling American book reviews. On the editorial board, Robert Allen and Larry Neal will be stepping down; we owe them both a debt of gratitude for scores of outstanding readers' reports. In their place let us welcome Martha Bailey, Dan Bogart, John Brown, Mauricio Drelichman, Eric Hilt, Douglas Irwin, David Jacks, Ian Keay, Kris Mitchener, and Şevket Pamuk.

One other key person also left the Journal's staff–Susan Isaac, who deftly steered manuscripts through the production process for twelve years and managed to keep everyone happy, from prickly authors to tardy editors. Fortunately, we have an ideal replacement in Sabrina Boschetti, who has been assistant editor in Pasadena since I became co-editor and is now serving as production editor as well.

Along with help from the MS Central Staff and our publisher, Cambridge University Press, Jeremy, Sabrina, Sue, and I helped implement Scholar One's Manuscript Central online submissions system, which Jeremy and I described in the last report. The system went live in February, replacing submissions by email and record keeping via Excel files that the editors maintained. This older system has survived for resubmissions, but now it too will disappear, and everything will be handled by MS Central at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jeh/.

Transitions of this sort are never painless, as anyone who has switched computers or changed software knows. Yet our passage to on line submissions seems to have generated relatively little wailing and gnashing of teeth. A few authors and reviewers had trouble because their internet browsers blocked pop-ups or because they had used a variety of emails over their careers. The solution is simply to allow pop-ups when on the site and to verify that the system has your current email address. You can do so by using the “Edit Account” link at the top right corner of your screen. You should also make sure that the system has the correct salutation (Dr., Prof., Mr., Ms., etc.) on file for you. Otherwise, you may receive automatic emails that begin with a brusk “Dear” followed by your last name. Again, the solution is simply to choose the way you wish to be addressed by going to the “Edit Account” feature.

Using Manuscript Central has also obliged us to modify our procedures slightly. With the online system, when a co-editor accepts a manuscript, it is swept into production and is difficult to snatch back, if any additional changes are necessary beyond the copy editing that takes place in production. What we have done, therefore, is to make all acceptances conditional. In the past, conditional acceptance was reserved for manuscripts with minor problems that had to be corrected before publication. The co-editor might, for example, have made a number of editorial suggestions, which would require the author to rework the prose. Now, however, all manuscripts will be accepted conditionally until they are ready for production.

These temporary birth pains are more than offset by all the advantages of the online submission system. It will cut the Association's costs and save the editors' time for tasks, such as editing, where their marginal productivity is presumably highest. It will also make it easier to keep accurate records of what has been submitted to the journal and what has been published. This year I had to assemble the records from two distinct Excel files maintained by the editorial offices and from a Manuscript Central reporting system that was not yet complete. The job was not easy, but in the future it will be much simpler.

Manuscript Central will also help the editors deal with the tide of submissions that pour into the Journal at the beginning and end of academic vacations. This year the flood set an all time record, with 203 total submissions, 158 of them new. The number of new manuscripts has never been that high, or at least that is what the archives back to 1987 suggest (Figure 1). One might worry about double counting, since the data came from three different and partially overlapping sources. Yet a careful investigation suggests that is not the case. I do know that Jeremy and I were busy this year. Perhaps the jump in submissions reflects a long-term trend. I shall let the time series experts decide.

The work load between the two offices has evened out this year, in part because the American office added Latin America to its duties in March of 2008. Until then, the American office handled articles on Canada and the United States only. The shift of responsibilities lightened the work load of the office for the “Rest of the World,” which had received 83 new submissions in 2006–2007, versus only 34 for the American office. This year both offices got 79 new submissions, although the Rest of the World office still had more resubmissions (Table 1). The topics of the new submissions at each office moved a bit closer this year, with both offices having 14 new

Table 1 ARTICLE SUBMISSIONS BY WORLD AREA, BROKEN DOWN BY TOPIC, JULY 2005–JUNE 2008

Note:

The numbers include new submissions only. The totals equal the number of new submissions received because a paper is classified in only one topic category. Until March of 2008, the North American Editorial Office was responsible for articles on the United States and Canada; thereafter, it took charge of submissions on Latin America too. In the latest year, this Americas office had 87 total submissions, 79 new and 8 resubmitted. The office for the rest of the world had 116 total submissions, 79 new and 37 resubmitted.

political economy papers. But the American office still received more papers on labor and industry, and fewer on growth.

Source: The yearly totals were taken from the published Editors' Notes.

Figure 1 TREND IN NEW SUBMISSIONS, 1987/88–2007/08

Handing over Latin America, however, is only part of the reason for the even workload at the two offices. The American office also experienced a surge of new submissions on the United States and Canada, up from 38 in 2006–2007 to 72 this year (Table 2). Some of these new submissions were comparative and were sent to the Rest of the World Office, but the others kept the American Office very busy. Time will tell whether the offices' workloads remain the same.

As for the periods the new submissions covered, they crept away a bit from the era before 1800 (Table 3). Is this a random shock or are economic historians turning away from the distant past? Again, only time will tell.

Despite the record number of new submissions, mean and median decision lags actually fell, both for new papers and all submissions (Table 4). On average, the editors made decisions in 72 days, and the median lag for new papers (80 days) was much lower than last year (111 days in 2006–2007). Other journals take much longer.

The acceptance rate remains virtually unchanged: 19 percent of new and revised manuscripts were accepted this year, versus 18 percent last year (Table 4). The acceptance rate at the American office (14 percent) was lower than at the Rest of World office (23 percent), but last year the reverse was true (27 percent acceptance rate at the American office in 2006–2007, and 14 percent in the Rest of the World office in 2006–2007). Like Jeremy last year, I believe that I have accepted a number of excellent papers.

Table 2 REGULAR ARTICLE SUBMISSIONS BY REGION, 1 JULY–30 JUNE

Note:

The numbers include new submissions only. Totals exceed new submissions because a paper can be classified as pertaining to more than one region.

Table 3 REGULAR ARTICLE SUBMISSIONS BY PERIOD, 1 JULY–30 JUNE

Note:

The numbers include new submissions only. Totals exceed submissions because a paper can be classified as pertaining to more than one period.

So despite the flood of new submissions and all changes in personnel and procedures, the essentials remain the same at the Journal of Economic History. The editors are still demanding, but they do not force authors to wait. They also continue to pay attention to our authors' prose. That takes time, and here I can only repeat Jeremy's complaint from last year, for we continue to receive poorly written submissions. A great article may be lurking there beneath the confused prose, like a statue imprisoned in a block of marble, but even a Michelangelo of an editor may be unable to chip it free. The editors, I should stress, are not the only ones to gripe about the problem. Referees do too, and it no doubt influences their opinion, particularly if they cannot see what the point of a paper is. Perhaps an appeal to the powerful forces of self-interest will work here: if you are an author, do have others read your manuscript before you submit it, and make sure that they pay attention to the form as well as to the content. Otherwise the referees will be grumpy.

Table 4 ACCEPTANCE AND TURNAROUND

Note:

The acceptance figures include new submissions and resubmissions, except when the resubmitted papers have already been accepted conditionally. Until March of 2008, the American Editorial Office was responsible for articles on the United States and Canada; thereafter, it took charge of submissions on Latin America too.

Are there other problems the Journal faces? Several contributors worry that articles published in the Journal before 2001 are not available on RePEc (Research Papers in Economics). Since articles in economic history have a long life, the Journal therefore loses some visibility. Fortunately, Cambridge University Press is now working on this problem, and I hope to have more to say about the solution next year.

Philip Hoffman, California Institute of Technology

Referees for the year were:

  • Brian A'Hearn

  • Andrew Alexander

  • Douglas Allen

  • James Allen

  • Robert Allen

  • Wells Allen

  • Lee J. Alston

  • Facundo Alvaredo

  • Glenn Ames

  • James E. Anderson

  • Terry Anderson

  • Abad Arroyo

  • Anthony B. Atkinson

  • Gareth Austin

  • Ben Baack

  • Scott Baier

  • Dudley Baines

  • Gerben Bakker

  • Jörg Baten

  • Robert Bates

  • Marianne Baxter

  • Daniel Benjamin

  • Richard Bensel

  • Jeffrey Bergstrand

  • Concha Betran

  • Margaret Blair

  • Hoyt Bleakley

  • Howard Bodenhorn

  • Dan Bogart

  • Michael Bordo

  • Maristella Botticini

  • Jérôme Bourdieu

  • Leah Platt Boustan

  • George Boyer

  • Loren Brandt

  • Thomas Brennan

  • Timothy Bresnahan

  • Stephen Broadberry

  • John C. Brown

  • Philip C. Brown

  • Warren Brown

  • Victor Bulmer-Thomas

  • Carsten Burhop

  • Joyce Burnette

  • Colleen Callahan

  • Charles Calomiris

  • Neil Canaday

  • Ann Carlos

  • Linda Carter

  • Susan B. Carter

  • Ben Chabot

  • Latika Chaudhary

  • Elaine Clark

  • Gregory Clark

  • Sally Clarke

  • Peter A. Coclanis

  • Philip R. P. Coelho

  • Raymond L. Cohn

  • Harold L. Cole

  • William J. Collins

  • Dora Costa

  • Lee A. Craig

  • François Crouzet

  • Timothy Cuff

  • Tomas Cvrcek

  • Guillaume Daudin

  • Joseph Davis

  • Arthur De Vany

  • John Devereux

  • Jean-Pierre Dormois

  • Mauricio Drelichman

  • Leonard Dudley

  • Colleen A. Dunlavy

  • Gerald P. Dwyer Jr.

  • Alan Dye

  • Scott Eddie

  • Michael Edelstein

  • Barry Eichengreen

  • Jari Eloranta

  • David Eltis

  • Todd Endelman

  • Stanley L. Engerman

  • Jürgen W. Falter

  • Giovanni Federico

  • Wilfried Feldenkirch

  • Stefano Fenoaltea

  • Niall Ferguson

  • Joseph P. Ferrie

  • Alexander J. Field

  • Ronald Findlay

  • Price Fishback

  • Terry Fitzgerald

  • Marc Flandreau

  • Robert Fleck

  • Caroline Fohlin

  • Nancy Folbre

  • Oscar Gelderblom

  • James Giesen

  • Yoshihisa Godo

  • William N. Goetzman

  • Jessica Goldberg

  • Claudia Goldin

  • Robert Gordon

  • Peter Gourevitch

  • George Grantham

  • William Greene

  • Paul R. Gregory

  • Avner Grief

  • Richard S. Grossman

  • Farley Grubb

  • Timothy Guinnane

  • Steve Haber

  • J. David Hacker

  • Michael R. Haines

  • Robert Hall

  • Gillian Hamilton

  • Christopher Hanes

  • Mary E. Hansen

  • Zeynep Hansen

  • David Harbord

  • C. Knick Harley

  • Leslie M. Harris

  • Ron Harris

  • Timothy J. Hatton

  • Peter Hayes

  • Jac C. Heckelman

  • Douglas Helms

  • R. Max Henderson

  • Alfonso Herranz-Loncan

  • Robert Higgs

  • Eric Hilt

  • Christopher Hoag

  • Paul M. Hohenberg

  • Adrienne Hood

  • Paul Huber

  • Michael Huberman

  • Greg Huff

  • Margaret Humphreys

  • Jane Humphries

  • Laurence R. Iannaccone

  • Douglas Irwin

  • David S. Jacks

  • Stuart Jenks

  • Ryan Johnson

  • Martha Jones

  • Charles Kahn

  • Walter D. Kamphoefner

  • Mark Kanazawa

  • Shawn Kantor

  • Ian Keay

  • Andrew Keeling

  • Zorina Khan

  • Gary King

  • Daniel Klerman

  • Meir Kohn

  • John Komlos

  • Timur Kuran

  • Masako Kurohane

  • Sumner LaCroix

  • Fabrice LaHoucq

  • Pedro Lains

  • Naomi R. Lamoreaux

  • Ryan Lampe

  • Anne Laurence

  • Marc Law

  • James Lee

  • Timothy Leunig

  • Margaret Levenstein

  • Giovanni Levi

  • Byron Lew

  • James B. Lewis

  • Gary D. Libecap

  • Jonathan J. Liebowitz

  • Justin Lin

  • Peter Lindert

  • Brendan Livingston

  • Katherine Livingston

  • Trevon Logan

  • Jason Long

  • Debin Ma

  • Jim MacGee

  • Mary MacKinnon

  • Thomas N. Maloney

  • Peter Mancall

  • Robert A. Margo

  • Pablo Martin-Aceña

  • Joseph R. Mason

  • Noel Maurer

  • Sean McCartney

  • John J. McCusker

  • James McGuire

  • Robert McGuire

  • Marjorie McIntosh

  • Christopher M. Meissner

  • Thomas Merrill

  • Jacob Metzer

  • Bernardo Meuller

  • Ronald Michener

  • Melinda Miller

  • David Mitch

  • Kris James Mitchener

  • Carolyn Moehling

  • Jon Moen

  • Joel Mokyr

  • Chiaki Moriguchi

  • Petra Moser

  • Reinhold C. Mueller

  • John H. Munro

  • Kevin Murphy

  • Aldo Musacchio

  • Larry Neal

  • Herbert Nickel

  • Tomas Nonnenmacher

  • Salvatore Nunnari

  • John Nye

  • Patrick O'Brien

  • Avner Offer

  • Sheilagh Ogilvie

  • Lee Ohanian

  • Mari Ohnuki

  • Tetsuji Okazaki

  • Alan Olmstead

  • Martha Olney

  • Kevin O'Rourke

  • Kent Osband

  • Roger Owen

  • Şevket Pamuk

  • Prasannan Parthasarathi

  • Hugh Patrick

  • Carla Rahn Phillips

  • Gilles Postel-Vinay

  • Mark Potter

  • Leandro Prados de la Escosura

  • Om Prakash

  • Jonathan B. Pritchett

  • Stephen Quinn

  • Dan Raff

  • Claudia Rei

  • Jaime Reis

  • Paul Rhode

  • Gary Richardson

  • David Ringrose,

  • Albrecht Ritschl

  • Phillip Roberts

  • Carlos Farinha Rodrigues

  • William Rogerson

  • Ronald Rogowski

  • Christina Romer

  • Mary Rose

  • Joshua L. Rosenbloom

  • Jean-Laurent Rosenthal

  • Elyce J. Rotella

  • Sheldon Rothblatt

  • Jesse Rothstein

  • Peter L. Rousseau

  • Vernon Ruttan

  • Raven Saks

  • Richard Salvucci

  • Lars G. Sandberg

  • Raymond Sauer

  • Jürgen Schlumbohm

  • Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey

  • Stuart Schwartz

  • Larry Schweikert

  • Mitchell Seligson

  • Carol H. Shiue

  • Ralph Shlomowitz

  • Pierre Sicsic

  • Kenneth A. Snowden

  • Mark Spoerer

  • David Stasavage

  • David James St. Clair

  • Richard H. Steckel

  • Steve Stern

  • Jochen Streb

  • Roman Studer

  • William Summerhill

  • William A. Sundstrom

  • Nathan Sussman

  • Donald Sutherland

  • Dhanoos Sutthiphisal

  • Richard Sylla

  • Rick Szostak

  • John Tang

  • Alan Taylor

  • Jason Taylor

  • Peter Temin

  • Jonathan Temple

  • Juro Teranishi

  • Ross Thomson

  • Mark Thornton

  • Giovanni Toniolo

  • Werner Troesken

  • William Frank Troost

  • William Tsutsui

  • Abraham L. Udovitch

  • Laura Ugolini

  • Karine van der Beek

  • Eric Van Wincoop

  • Jan Luiten van Zanden

  • François Velde

  • Jacob Vigdor

  • Nancy Virts

  • Hans-Joachim Voth

  • Jenny B. Wahl

  • Carlos Waisman

  • Richard Waller

  • John Wallis

  • Patrick Wallis

  • James Walvin

  • Kirsten Wandschneider

  • Marianne Ward

  • Marc D. Weidenmier

  • Thomas Weiss

  • Allen Wells

  • Robert Whaples

  • Warren Whatley

  • Eugene N. White

  • Jeffrey G. Williamson

  • Sam Williamson

  • Lynne Withey

  • Susan Wolcott

  • Nikolaus Wolf

  • Gavin Wright

  • Robert Wright

  • Donghyu Yang

  • Samy Yiagadeese

Figure 0

Table 1 ARTICLE SUBMISSIONS BY WORLD AREA, BROKEN DOWN BY TOPIC, JULY 2005–JUNE 2008

Figure 1

Figure 1 TREND IN NEW SUBMISSIONS, 1987/88–2007/08

Source: The yearly totals were taken from the published Editors' Notes.
Figure 2

Table 2 REGULAR ARTICLE SUBMISSIONS BY REGION, 1 JULY–30 JUNE

Figure 3

Table 3 REGULAR ARTICLE SUBMISSIONS BY PERIOD, 1 JULY–30 JUNE

Figure 4

Table 4 ACCEPTANCE AND TURNAROUND