Upon acceptance of the manuscript, the author will need to provide a copy of all files associated with the manuscript on disk in Word, or send the files as attachments to stewartr@ohio.edu.
Authors should use a title page, followed by an abstract, text, notes, table(s) and graph(s).
The author should provide material for an identifying note.
This note may include acknowledgments for financial assistance, advice, access to special materials, etc., and indicate whether the article is based on a dissertation or thesis or has been presented orally.
The text should begin with a clear statement of the problem followed by the statement of hypothesis or research questions.
Methods of collecting information or data should be explained next, to the extent that the particular study requires.
If the method is obvious, as is usually the case in historical or legal studies, no elaboration is called for.
The author should provide enough detail about method that the person who wants to replicate the study can do so.
The results or findings section should come next.
It is important that the results or findings be explained in terms of the hypotheses or research questions.
Interpretation of the results or findings should be reserved for the discussion or conclusion section, which comes next.
A summary or summary and conclusions comes last. The basic structure should be followed whether the study is quantitative, qualitative, historical or legal.
note style
We use notes, not references. We are using the Journalism Quarterly
note style. Examples are included below: