- Journal of Church and State
(online with HighWire Press since 28 May 2009)URL: http://jcs.oxfordjournals.org (outside North America: http://intl-jcs.oxfordjournals.org:1080)
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Online ISSN: 2040-4867
Print ISSN: 0021-969X
additional details
Journal of Church & State Oxford University Press and the J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-state Studies are pleased to announce that the full text of Journal of Church & State is available online.The Journal of Church & State is concerned with what has been called the "greatest subject in the history of the West." It seeks to stimulate interest, dialogue, research, and publication in the broad area of religion and the state. JCS publishes constitutional, historical, philosophical, theological, and sociological studies on religion and the body politic in various countries and cultures of the world, including the United States. Each issue features, in addition to a timely editorial, five or more major articles, and thirty-five to forty reviews of significant books related to church and state. Periodically, important ecclesiastical documents and government texts of legislation and/or court decisions are also published. Regular features include "Notes on Church State Affairs", which reports current developments throughout the world, and a list of "Recent Doctoral Dissertations in Church and State."
Journal of Church & State Online contains the full content of each issue of the journal in full-text HTML and PDF formats beginning with the Winter 2009 issue (Volume 51, Issue 1). Full-text PDFs and abstracts are available back to the November 1959 issue.
Each issue will be placed online approximately on the date it is mailed to subscribers; therefore the online site will be available prior to receipt of your paper copy. Online readers may want to sign up for the eTOC (electronic Table of Contents) service, which will deliver each new issue's table of contents via email. The web site also provides access to information about the journal (such as Instructions to Authors, the Editorial Board, and subscription information).
Access to the full text of articles will be available by institutional license, which comes with all institutional subscriptions, or by individual subscription. All other access (e.g., to Abstracts, eTOCs, searching, Instructions to Authors) will remain freely available.
We would appreciate comments, critiques, questions, or suggestions from you; these can be sent via the Feedback link found on all pages of the site. Feedback from readers will help us decide what new features would be most valuable for the site and how well it is working for its readers.
A full list of Oxford Journals online is available at: http://www.oxfordjournals.org/
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John Sack, Director,
HighWire Press, Stanford University