General Call For Papers

by | Aug 10, 2022

The Ghana Policy Journal (GPJ) invites all researchers to submit their research papers for publication in the Journal’s December 2022 issue. The GPJ is the flagship international journal of the IEA, published under the guidance of Prof. Alexander Bilson Darku (Editor) and an eminent international Editorial Board. Published annually, it serves as a forum for the presentation and discussion of views from a wide range of scholars dealing with policy related issues concerning Ghana, and Ghana’s link and relationship with the rest of the world. The Journal particularly encourages quantitative and empirical studies with results and conclusions relevant to policy formulation and analyses.

We are inviting papers for the Volume 7 issue of the Journal to be released in December 2022. For this seventh issue of GPJ, contributed papers should reach the Editor by the 30th September, 2022. Authors will be informed of the final status of refereeing of their papers by the 31st October, 2022.

The GPJ is indexed in the electronic databases of the American Economic Association including EconLit, the largest economics database in the world. An annotation of the Journal was published in the New Books Section of the September 2007 issue of the Journal of Economic Literature. Abstracts of all papers published in the Journal appear in EconLit. For listing of the Ghana Policy Journal on the Internet database of journals, please check the following website: http://www.econlit.org/eclist.html#jnlg

Contributed papers should be written in English language and deal with issues in anthropology, business, economics, education, entrepreneurship, geography, history, law, music, political science, religion, sports, sociology and any other social sciences, and topics involving natural sciences with some policy orientation.

The Journal accepts papers which uses either qualitative or quantitative methods but must have some policy orientation. The length of a contributed paper should be between 4,000 to 10,000 words. Letters to the Editor or short notes (about 1,000 words) are also encouraged, in which contributors present comments on papers previously published or on issues of current relevance and importance.

All manuscripts must be accompanied by an abstract of not more than 300 words. All correspondence must be via email to the editor at alexander.darku@uleth.ca

INSTRUCTION FOR AUTHORS

1. Authors should use Microsoft Word only. All text must be in Times New Roman, including charts, figures, and graphs. Equations should be presented using Microsoft Word Equation Editor.

2.  All submitted papers should be typed on one side of paper and single-spaced including references and endnotes. Endnotes are preferred to footnotes.

3. Submitted papers should include a separate title page indicating the title of the paper, the names of the authors and their institutional affiliations and the postal and electronic mail addresses of the corresponding author(s).

4. An abstract of up to 300 words should be provided in a separate page after the title page. The abstract should contain a list of three to ten keywords inserted at the bottom of the abstract.

5. For verification of empirical works, the paper should be accompanied by a computer disk with data files that can allow a reviewer to independently replicate the construction of the data and the results of the analysis.

6. The authors of submitted papers should indicate in their covering letter to the Editor that their paper is an original work and that the paper has not been published and is not being submitted to any other outlet for publication.

7. Submission of a manuscript implies: that the work has not been published elsewhere; that it is not under consideration for publication elsewhere; that all Co-authors, if any, have approved the submission.

8.  The referencing style should follow the Harvard format. For example: (Mensa, 2005) or (see Kufour, 2006, pp. 18-20). The references should be listed alphabetically by author at the end of the paper based on the following examples:

For a journal article

Hensher, D., Shore, N and Train, K. (2006) “Investment in Intangible Capital: An Enterprise Perspective”, Economic Record, 82, pp. 56-66.

For a book:

Pearce, D. and Barbier, E.B. (2000) Blueprint for a Sustainable Economy, Earthscan, London, 273 pp.

For a chapter in a book

Mohammed, S. J. and Anaman, K.A. (2003) “Analysis of the Health and Environmental Quality Adjusted Gross Domestic Product in Brunei Darussalam”, in K. A. Anaman and Duraman, I. (eds.), Applied Economic Analysis in Brunei Darussalam: Evaluation of Economic Growth and Trade, Microeconomic Efficiency and Analysis of Socio-economic Problems, Universiti Brunei Darussalam, Bandar Seri Begawan, pp. 47-66.

For a reference from a website

Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) (2003) “Asean Statistics”, (Jakarta, Asean), http://www.aseansec.org/13000.htm.

8. The layout of the paper in terms of major headings should be as follows”

(a) Title Page

(b) ABSTRACT

(c) INTRODUCTION AND PROBLEM STATEMENT

(d) LITERATURE REVIEW

(e) THEORETICAL MODELS (if required)

(f) METHODOLOGY

(g) RESULTS (if required)

(h) DISCUSSION AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF STUDY

(i) CONCLUSIONS (briefly written in a few paragraphs)

(j) ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

(k) ENDNOTES

(k) REFERENCES

(l) APPENDICES (including major data if necessary)

Subheadings may be used and should have capital letters at the beginning of a word. For example under the major heading, “INTRODUCTION AND PROBLEM STATEMENT”, a subheading may be “Objectives of the Study” or “Organisation of this Paper”.

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