Example of Global Networks format
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Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format
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Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format Example of Global Networks format
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This content is only for preview purposes. The original open access content can be found here.
open access Open Access

Global Networks — Template for authors

Publisher: Wiley
Categories Rank Trend in last 3 yrs
Social Sciences (all) #36 of 260 down down by 20 ranks
journal-quality-icon Journal quality:
High
calendar-icon Last 4 years overview: 127 Published Papers | 427 Citations
indexed-in-icon Indexed in: Scopus
last-updated-icon Last updated: 22/06/2020
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Related Journals

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Journal Performance & Insights

Impact Factor

CiteRatio

Determines the importance of a journal by taking a measure of frequency with which the average article in a journal has been cited in a particular year.

A measure of average citations received per peer-reviewed paper published in the journal.

1.929

36% from 2018

Impact factor for Global Networks from 2016 - 2019
Year Value
2019 1.929
2018 3.018
2017 1.587
2016 1.359
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

3.4

29% from 2019

CiteRatio for Global Networks from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 3.4
2019 4.8
2018 4.5
2017 4.1
2016 3.0
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

insights Insights

  • Impact factor of this journal has decreased by 36% in last year.
  • This journal’s impact factor is in the top 10 percentile category.

insights Insights

  • CiteRatio of this journal has decreased by 29% in last years.
  • This journal’s CiteRatio is in the top 10 percentile category.

SCImago Journal Rank (SJR)

Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP)

Measures weighted citations received by the journal. Citation weighting depends on the categories and prestige of the citing journal.

Measures actual citations received relative to citations expected for the journal's category.

0.685

44% from 2019

SJR for Global Networks from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 0.685
2019 1.214
2018 1.509
2017 1.045
2016 1.068
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

1.553

27% from 2019

SNIP for Global Networks from 2016 - 2020
Year Value
2020 1.553
2019 2.113
2018 1.921
2017 1.868
2016 1.499
graph view Graph view
table view Table view

insights Insights

  • SJR of this journal has decreased by 44% in last years.
  • This journal’s SJR is in the top 10 percentile category.

insights Insights

  • SNIP of this journal has decreased by 27% in last years.
  • This journal’s SNIP is in the top 10 percentile category.

Global Networks

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Wiley

Global Networks

Approved by publishing and review experts on SciSpace, this template is built as per for Global Networks formatting guidelines as mentioned in Wiley author instructions. The current version was created on 21 Jun 2020 and has been used by 467 authors to write and format their manuscripts to this journal.

Social Sciences

i
Last updated on
21 Jun 2020
i
ISSN
1470-2266
i
Impact Factor
High - 2.055
i
Open Access
Yes
i
Sherpa RoMEO Archiving Policy
Yellow faq
i
Plagiarism Check
Available via Turnitin
i
Endnote Style
Download Available
i
Bibliography Name
apa
i
Citation Type
Numbered
[25]
i
Bibliography Example
Beenakker, C.W.J. (2006) Specular andreev reflection in graphene.Phys. Rev. Lett., 97 (6), 067 007. URL 10.1103/PhysRevLett.97.067007.

Top papers written in this journal

Journal Article DOI: 10.1111/1471-0374.00043
Methodological Nationalism and Beyond: Nation-State Building, Migration and the Social Sciences
Andreas Wimmer1, Nina Glick Schiller2

Abstract:

Methodological nationalism is understood as the assumption that the nation/state/society is the natural social and political form of the modern world. We distinguish three modes of methodological nationalism that have characterized main- stream social science, and then show how these have influenced research on migra- tion. W... Methodological nationalism is understood as the assumption that the nation/state/society is the natural social and political form of the modern world. We distinguish three modes of methodological nationalism that have characterized main- stream social science, and then show how these have influenced research on migra- tion. We discover parallels between nationalist thinking and the conceptualization of migration in postwar social sciences. In a historical tour d'horizon, we show that this mainstream concept has developed in close interaction with nation-state building pro- cesses in the West and the role that immigration and integration policies have played within them. The shift towards a study of 'transnational communities' - the last phase in this process - was more a consequence of an epistemic move away from methodo- logical nationalism than of the appearance of new objects of observation. The article concludes by recommending new concepts for analysis that, on the one hand, are not coloured by methodological nationalism and, on the other hand, go beyond the fluidism of much contemporary social theory. After the first flurry of confusion about the nature and extent of contemporary pro- cesses of globalization, social scientists moved beyond rhetorical generalities about the decline of the nation-state and began to examine the ways in which nation-states are currently being reconfigured rather than demolished. That nation-states and nationalism are compatible with globalization was made all too obvious. We wit- nessed the flouring of nationalism and the restructuring of a whole range of new states in Eastern Europe along national lines in the midst of growing global interconnec- tions. The concomitance of these processes provides us with an intellectual opening to think about the limitations of our conceptual apparatus. It has become easier to under- stand that it is because we have come to take for granted a world divided into discrete and autonomous nation-states that we see nation-state building and global inter- connections as contradictory. The next step is to analyse how the concept of the nation-state has and still does influence past and current thinking in the social sciences, including our thinking about transnational migration. It is our aim in this article to move in this direction by exploring the intellectual potential of two hypotheses. We demonstrate that nation-state building processes have fundamentally shaped the ways immigration has been perceived and received. These perceptions have in turn influenced, though not completely determined, social science read more read less

Topics:

Cultural production and nationalism (61%)61% related to the paper, Nationalism (57%)57% related to the paper, Social theory (55%)55% related to the paper, Nation state (54%)54% related to the paper, Globalization (53%)53% related to the paper
2,393 Citations
Journal Article DOI: 10.1111/J.1471-0374.2009.00277.X
Variegated neoliberalization: geographies, modalities, pathways
Neil Brenner1, Jamie Peck2, Nik Theodore3

Abstract:

Across the broad field of heterodox political economy, ‘neoliberalism’ appears to have become a rascal concept – promiscuously pervasive, yet inconsistently defined, empirically imprecise and frequently contested. Controversies regarding its precise meaning are more than merely semantic. They generally flow from underlying di... Across the broad field of heterodox political economy, ‘neoliberalism’ appears to have become a rascal concept – promiscuously pervasive, yet inconsistently defined, empirically imprecise and frequently contested. Controversies regarding its precise meaning are more than merely semantic. They generally flow from underlying disagreements regarding the sources, expressions and implications of contemporary regulatory transformations. In this article, we consider the handling of ‘neoliberalism’ within three influential strands of heterodox political economy – the varieties of capitalism approach; historical materialist international political economy; and governmentality approaches. While each of these research traditions sheds light on contemporary processes of market-oriented regulatory restructuring, we argue that each also underplays and/or misreads the systemically uneven, or ‘variegated’, character of these processes. Enabled by a critical interrogation of how each approach interprets the geographies, modalities and pathways of neoliberalization processes, we argue that the problematic of variegation must be central to any adequate account of marketized forms of regulatory restructuring and their alternatives under post-1970s capitalism. Our approach emphasizes the cumulative impacts of successive ‘waves’ of neoliberalization upon uneven institutional landscapes, in particular: (a) their establishment of interconnected, mutually recursive policy relays within an increasingly transnational field of market-oriented regulatory transfer; and (b) their infiltration and reworking of the geoinstitutional frameworks, or ‘rule regimes’, within which regulatory experimentation unfolds. This mode of analysis has significant implications for interpreting the current global economic crisis. read more read less

Topics:

International political economy (53%)53% related to the paper, Governmentality (50%)50% related to the paper
1,375 Citations
Journal Article DOI: 10.1111/1471-0374.00007
Chains and networks, territories and scales: towards a relational framework for analysing the global economy
Peter Dicken1, Philip F. Kelly2, Kris Olds3, Henry Wai-chung Yeung3

Abstract:

A vast and continually expanding literature on economic globalization continues to generate a miasma of conflicting viewpoints and alternative discourses. This article argues that any understanding of the global economy must be sensitive to four considerations: (a) conceptual categories and labels carry with them the dis- cur... A vast and continually expanding literature on economic globalization continues to generate a miasma of conflicting viewpoints and alternative discourses. This article argues that any understanding of the global economy must be sensitive to four considerations: (a) conceptual categories and labels carry with them the dis- cursive power to shape material processes; (b) multiple scales of analysis must be incorporated in recognition of the contemporary 'relativization of scale'; (c) no single institutional or organizational locus of analysis should be privileged; and (d) extrapolations from specific case studies and instances must be treated with caution, but this should not preclude the option of discussing the global economy, and power relations within it, as a structural whole. This paper advocates a network method- ology as a potential framework to incorporate these concerns. Such a methodology requires us to identify actors in networks, their ongoing relations and the structural outcomes of these relations. Networks thus become the foundational unit of analysis for our understanding of the global economy, rather than individuals, firms or nation states. In presenting this argument we critically examine two examples of network methodology that have been used to provide frameworks for analysing the global economy: global commodity chains and actor-network theory. We suggest that while they fall short of fulfilling the promise of a network methodology in some respects, they do provide indications of the utility of such a methodology as a basis for under- standing the global economy. read more read less

Topics:

Global strategy (59%)59% related to the paper, Commodity (Marxism) (51%)51% related to the paper, Unit of analysis (51%)51% related to the paper, Globalization (51%)51% related to the paper, Actor–network theory (50%)50% related to the paper
View PDF
1,007 Citations
Journal Article DOI: 10.1111/J.1471-0374.2005.00122.X
Long distance intimacy: class, gender and intergenerational relations between mothers and children in Filipino transnational families
Rhacel Salazar Parreñas1

Abstract:

In this article I address transnational intergenerational relations between Filipino migrant mothers and their young adult children and examine how families achieve intimacy across great distances. I do this by identifying and examining the transnational communication methods Filipino migrant families use to develop intimacy,... In this article I address transnational intergenerational relations between Filipino migrant mothers and their young adult children and examine how families achieve intimacy across great distances. I do this by identifying and examining the transnational communication methods Filipino migrant families use to develop intimacy, in other words familiarity, across borders. In my analysis, I address how political economy and gender shape the dynamics of transnational communication. By showing how economic conditions and gender shape transnational family com- munication, I provide a socially thick lens through which to understand the formation of transnational intimacy and emphasize how larger systems of inequality shape the lives of the children left behind by the global migration of women. Migration engenders changes in a family. This is particularly so in the Philippines where a great number of mothers and fathers emigrate to sustain their families economically. There are no reliable government statistics on the number of mothers and fathers leaving their children behind in the Philippines, but non-governmental organizations estimate there are approximately nine million of these children growing up physically apart from a migrant father, migrant mother or both migrant parents (Kakammpi 2004). 1 This figure represents approximately 27 per cent of the overall youth population. The formation of transnational households poses challenges to the achievement of intimate familial relations between migrant parents and the children they leave behind in the Philippines. In this article, I address transnational inter- generational relations between Filipino migrant mothers and their young adult children and examine how families achieve intimacy across great distances. I do this by identifying and examining the acts of transnational communication that Filipino migrant families use to develop intimacy, in other word familiarity, across borders. By transnational communication, I refer to the flow of ideas, information, goods, money and emotions. Contemporary transnational households have a different temporal and spatial experience from the binational families of the past. New technologies 'heighten the immediacy and frequency of migrants' contact with their sending communities and read more read less

Topics:

Population (51%)51% related to the paper
637 Citations
Journal Article DOI: 10.1111/1471-0374.00012
Introduction: the debates and significance of immigrant transnationalism
Alejandro Portes1

Abstract:

This introduction explores reasons for the continuing debate on the subject of transnationalism and persistent scepticism about the significance of the topic. The basis for such disagreements has to do less with the actual existence of the phenomenon than with methodological shortcomings that led to its overestimation in the ... This introduction explores reasons for the continuing debate on the subject of transnationalism and persistent scepticism about the significance of the topic. The basis for such disagreements has to do less with the actual existence of the phenomenon than with methodological shortcomings that led to its overestimation in the early literature and the conceptual failure to distinguish between cross-border activities conducted by major institutions and by private actors in civil society. I explore these various problems seeking to clarify the actual scope of the phenomenon of transnationalism and its novel character. Despite recent findings that point to limited numerical involvement of immigrant groups in transnational activities, the latter remain significant because of their prospective growth and their impact on both immigrant adaptation in receiving countries and the development prospects of sending nations and communities. The evidence presented in the following articles document in detail these various aspects and indicates the multiple forms adopted by this phenomenon among immigrant groups in Europe and the United States. read more read less

Topics:

Transnationalism (57%)57% related to the paper
596 Citations
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Frequently asked questions

1. Can I write Global Networks in LaTeX?

Absolutely not! Our tool has been designed to help you focus on writing. You can write your entire paper as per the Global Networks guidelines and auto format it.

2. Do you follow the Global Networks guidelines?

Yes, the template is compliant with the Global Networks guidelines. Our experts at SciSpace ensure that. If there are any changes to the journal's guidelines, we'll change our algorithm accordingly.

3. Can I cite my article in multiple styles in Global Networks?

Of course! We support all the top citation styles, such as APA style, MLA style, Vancouver style, Harvard style, and Chicago style. For example, when you write your paper and hit autoformat, our system will automatically update your article as per the Global Networks citation style.

4. Can I use the Global Networks templates for free?

Sign up for our free trial, and you'll be able to use all our features for seven days. You'll see how helpful they are and how inexpensive they are compared to other options, Especially for Global Networks.

5. Can I use a manuscript in Global Networks that I have written in MS Word?

Yes. You can choose the right template, copy-paste the contents from the word document, and click on auto-format. Once you're done, you'll have a publish-ready paper Global Networks that you can download at the end.

6. How long does it usually take you to format my papers in Global Networks?

It only takes a matter of seconds to edit your manuscript. Besides that, our intuitive editor saves you from writing and formatting it in Global Networks.

7. Where can I find the template for the Global Networks?

It is possible to find the Word template for any journal on Google. However, why use a template when you can write your entire manuscript on SciSpace , auto format it as per Global Networks's guidelines and download the same in Word, PDF and LaTeX formats? Give us a try!.

8. Can I reformat my paper to fit the Global Networks's guidelines?

Of course! You can do this using our intuitive editor. It's very easy. If you need help, our support team is always ready to assist you.

9. Global Networks an online tool or is there a desktop version?

SciSpace's Global Networks is currently available as an online tool. We're developing a desktop version, too. You can request (or upvote) any features that you think would be helpful for you and other researchers in the "feature request" section of your account once you've signed up with us.

10. I cannot find my template in your gallery. Can you create it for me like Global Networks?

Sure. You can request any template and we'll have it setup within a few days. You can find the request box in Journal Gallery on the right side bar under the heading, "Couldn't find the format you were looking for like Global Networks?”

11. What is the output that I would get after using Global Networks?

After writing your paper autoformatting in Global Networks, you can download it in multiple formats, viz., PDF, Docx, and LaTeX.

12. Is Global Networks's impact factor high enough that I should try publishing my article there?

To be honest, the answer is no. The impact factor is one of the many elements that determine the quality of a journal. Few of these factors include review board, rejection rates, frequency of inclusion in indexes, and Eigenfactor. You need to assess all these factors before you make your final call.

13. What is Sherpa RoMEO Archiving Policy for Global Networks?

SHERPA/RoMEO Database

We extracted this data from Sherpa Romeo to help researchers understand the access level of this journal in accordance with the Sherpa Romeo Archiving Policy for Global Networks. The table below indicates the level of access a journal has as per Sherpa Romeo's archiving policy.

RoMEO Colour Archiving policy
Green Can archive pre-print and post-print or publisher's version/PDF
Blue Can archive post-print (ie final draft post-refereeing) or publisher's version/PDF
Yellow Can archive pre-print (ie pre-refereeing)
White Archiving not formally supported
FYI:
  1. Pre-prints as being the version of the paper before peer review and
  2. Post-prints as being the version of the paper after peer-review, with revisions having been made.

14. What are the most common citation types In Global Networks?

The 5 most common citation types in order of usage for Global Networks are:.

S. No. Citation Style Type
1. Author Year
2. Numbered
3. Numbered (Superscripted)
4. Author Year (Cited Pages)
5. Footnote

15. How do I submit my article to the Global Networks?

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16. Can I download Global Networks in Endnote format?

Yes, SciSpace provides this functionality. After signing up, you would need to import your existing references from Word or Bib file to SciSpace. Then SciSpace would allow you to download your references in Global Networks Endnote style according to Elsevier guidelines.

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