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MANUSCRIPT
SUBMISSIONS
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Journal Overview
Families in
Society: The Journal of Contemporary Social
Services is a core publication in social
work scholarship and is a trusted forum for
social service professionals to explore and
share ideas and concepts in the fields of social
work and human services. Published by the
Alliance for Children and Families, the articles
in the journal represent the art and science of
social work, and are at the forefront of
emerging issues and trends in the field. Those
that can benefit from Families in Society
are practitioners, clinicians, administrators,
researchers, policy analysts, health
professionals, educators, and students.
For more information
on submission guidelines, please click the links
below.
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About Families in Society
Families in Society
is a double-blind, peer-reviewed journal on social work
and related fields. As such, it serves as a forum for
addressing the interests, activities, and concerns of
human services professionals in direct practice,
education, supervision, administration, research, and
policy and planning.
Readership is estimated at approximately 20,000-plus
based on a pass-a-long average of at least seven readers
per issue. More than 75% of the circulation comes from
institutions, including agencies and institutional
libraries. Approximately 25% of the paid subscriptions
are from international sources with readers in all
corners of the globe. The journal has wide-ranging
content and appeals to practitioners, educators, and
allied professionals.
Author
Guidelines
- The page count for the manuscript in its entirety
(including abstract; references; and accompanying
figures, tables, or appendices) can not exceed 22
pages. Please submit the manuscript files using
1-inch margins, double-spaced paragraphs, and 12-point
Times New Roman font.
E-mail a cover letter (indicating the
corresponding author with contact information,
including an e-mail address) and an electronic version
of the manuscript.
Please include a cover sheet with the name, position
title, and the affiliation of each author. The next
page should include the manuscript title and
abstract (limited to 120 words), followed by the
body, references, and tables/figures.
The publisher requires the
Publisher Agreement be completed, signed, and returned
via mail or fax with your manuscript submission. This ensures that
you understand all copyright conditions and confirms
that your work has not been previously published.
The
electronic version of your file(s) should be sent to:
Manuscripts@FamiliesInSociety.org.
Return
copyright forms:
Families in Society
11700
West Lake Park Drive
Milwaukee, WI 53224-3099
Fax: (414) 359-1074
- The journal
follows the style of the Publication Manual of
the American Psychological Association, Sixth
Edition. Please consult Section
8.07 (pp. 241–243) of the Publication
Manual
and confirm all checklist items prior to submission.
Articles should conclude with a detailed and
thoughtful Implications for Practice
section: an exposition of how the material can
appropriately be used in/with rethinking practice
settings, formulating policy, informing further
research, strengthening the administration of social
services agencies, and/or benefiting clients and
communities.
- Contributors are
strongly advised to have a statistician or
methodological expert review the accuracy of
discrete data found in the article text, tables, and
figures before submission.
- Manuscripts should
have clear contextual information—content should
clearly identify the context(s) in which the topic
arose; in which any or all information and findings
can be applied; and who, in what types of
circumstances, should take notice of the article.
For example, where might the content of the article
be applied, under what circumstances, and for what
purpose(s)? With such information near the
beginning, readers are more likely to ascertain the
pertinence of the article to their own
circumstances. Such information can be part of the
abstract.
- If the manuscript is
accepted, authors may be invited to present a
60-minute teleconference, develop a discussion guide
with talking points, or prepare sample continuing
education course questions.
- Permission
authorization and fees for the use of any existing
copyrighted material (e.g., fiction/nonfiction
text, photos/graphics, poetry, tables, figures,
etc.) that are incorporated into a manuscript beyond
use permitted by §107 and §108 of the U.S. Copyright
Law are the sole responsibility of the author(s). When
applicable, signed authorization by the publisher of
such works is required at the time of submission.
Manuscripts not
following the above instructions can not be reviewed
until all guidelines have been met.
Manuscript Peer Review Process
Manuscripts submitted to
Families in Society are considered via a
double-blind, peer-review process. When received, the
editor scans the manuscript for topic relevance and
quality control and identifies at least three consulting
editors to review those papers selected for
consideration. After agreeing to review a manuscript
within the given timeframe, assigned reviewers are given
3–4 weeks to provide detailed comments and recommend
acceptance or rejection. The editor then considers
these comments and recommendations, along with his/her
own analysis of the paper. A disposition is then
conveyed to the corresponding author.
An anonymous copy of the
reviewer comments portion is given to the author with
the disposition letter. An anonymous copy of each
reviewer's comments is also shared between those
consulting editors for their edification.
The written disposition
is usually sent to the corresponding author within 3–4
months of submission. Certain manuscripts with
complex data or atypical topics may require a review
period longer than 4 months. Additionally, some time
periods during the year, such as before or after
holidays and academic breaks, may take longer than usual
to secure qualified reviewers.
Manuscript Review
Criteria
Consulting editors/reviewers critique manuscripts using
a review guide provided by Families in Society.
Key review criteria include:
- Relevancy to the
social work environment
- Appropriateness for
inclusion in Families in Society (see
Typical Issue Content)
- Quality of writing
and adherence to APA-style standards
- Thoroughness and
relevancy of the literature search
- Soundness of
research methods or ideas
- Conclusions that are
in keeping with the scope of the manuscript
- Findings that are
applicable to practice, policy, or other use
- Articles that are
applicable to practice should include an ample
section of implications for practice
Initial
Manuscript Disposition
The Families in Society acceptance rate is
approximately 30% of all manuscripts reviewed. Most of
these manuscripts are accepted conditionally, pending
revisions suggested by the reviewers, editor, or both.
Resubmission
Guidelines
Revised manuscripts should adhere to all standard
guidelines, including page limit, and be resubmitted in both
electronic and hard copy formats. Authors should also
include a separate document outlining the changes made
from their original manuscript. Authors should
expect to receive a final disposition on their revised
manuscript within 1 month after the resubmission date.
There is a deadline of 4
months for revised manuscripts to be resubmitted after
the initial disposition. This allows manuscripts to be
published on a timely basis. If manuscripts are
submitted after this deadline, the manuscript will be
received as a new manuscript and put through the
peer-review process again.
Determining
Manuscript Publication Date
After manuscripts are accepted for publication, they
typically appear 12–18 months after the original
submission date. Manuscripts are not strictly scheduled
for publication in the order in which they are accepted.
Instead, the editor selects manuscripts based on focus
or topic, and a desired editorial balance within an
issue.
Typical Issue Content
Articles
Because of social work’s unique concern with the
person-in-the-situation, across the life span and across
generations, Families in Society articles
reflect the broad array of issues, conditions, and
trends that are pertinent to personal, interpersonal,
familial, community, and societal living. In
this regard, articles might be informative, instructive,
reflective, and controversial. More specifically, the
journal welcomes articles concerned with:
- Issues in
direct practice. Examples include practice
with special populations, innovations, preparation
for practice, unmet needs, dealing with involuntary
clients, obstacles to helping, private practice and
agency practice, the place of values, culture, and
diversity.
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Reflections on and analysis of practice.
Families in Society is particularly
interested in critical and controversial essays that
examine the state of the art, the strengths and
failings of professional practice, the adequacy of
professional education, the limitations of social
policy, future needs, and personal reflections on
what it means to be a social worker, the philosophy
of practice.
- The role of
theory and other foundations for practice.
Among other issues is the question about how the
integration of theory and practice might be
achieved. What theories are particularly relevant to
social work education and practice?
- Research
reports. Families in Society is
receptive to many forms of inquiry including
quantitative and qualitative. Beyond the relevance
of the study itself, a major criterion for
publication is the study’s applicability to practice
concerns and its accessibility to
practitioner-readers.
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Agency/profession. Articles dealing with
the context of practice including training and
supervision, the agency and the community, legal and
ethical issues, administration, funding, and
interagency alliances are welcome.
Other formats.
Families in Society also invites literary
formats other than the standard manuscript that readily
capture the humanistic qualities of practice. Such
formats might include brief commentaries, reports of
experiences, reflections on practice, personal essays,
narratives, and critical discussions.
Book Reviews
Families in Society Online typically publishes
3–5 book reviews each quarter, written by readers with
an expertise or special interest in the subject or topic
of the book being reviewed. Please send us an
e-mail if you are interested in joining our team of
book reviewers.
Letters to the
Editor
Readers are encouraged to voice their opinions in
support of, or to counter arguments presented by their
peers within the pages of the journal. Letters to the
editor must be signed with contact information,
including an e-mail address. All letters will be
verified prior to publication.
Families in Society
reserves the right to edit letters for length, grammar,
punctuation, and spelling. Only letters that are
relevant, timely, and concise will be considered for
publication. Letters will be published on a
space-available basis.
Op-Ed Pieces
Periodically, Families in Society will ask a
reader to prepare a response to previous content that is
more extensive than the letter format allows. As with
letters to the editor, Families in Society
reserves the right to edit for length, grammar,
punctuation, and spelling. Please contact the editor
before preparing an Op-Ed piece.
Web-Only Content
The
Web-Only Collection provides a forum for
additional content not published in the print
journal. While still maintaining the integrity and
editorial standards of Families in Society
content that our readers have come to expect, the
journal will be able to provide more research, analysis,
and other significant information than our print format
allows. This format also allows for original content
that might otherwise be considered unconventional for
print format.
Recurring Article Series
Occasional Essays
When the conventional manuscript format is not
appropriate, or when an author wishes to produce a piece
that is subjective in tone and content, Families in
Society
publishes Occasional Essays. These pieces may or
may not be processed using the peer-review system.
Please contact the editor if you are interested in
having an essay considered for publication.
Writers at Work
These articles reflect the writing process as it relates
to the preparation of material for journals such as
Families in Society, and for other professional
venues, including dissertation development. Please query
the editor before submitting a Writers at Work
article.
Field Notes
Items appearing as Field Notes recount the
experiences of our readers in the field, and typically
are written in the first person narrative. Field
Notes serves as a forum for social workers where
they can briefly share and comment on their experiences
as practitioners, clinicians, and/or administrators. The
pieces may range between 4–14 double-spaced pages.
Please query the editor to discuss intended submissions.
Issues with a Special Focus
Families in Society
biennially produces at least one issue with a special
focus. Typically, these consist of 7–8 articles devoted
to a singular focus. For example, recent special issues
or focus sections featured the strengths perspective,
program outcomes, and social welfare. Suggestions for
special issues and focus sections are welcome. Please
e-mail the editor at Editor@FamiliesInSociety.org with
suggestions. |