GUIDELINES FOR THE VOLUME OF SELECTED PAPER PRESENTED AT THE 7TH BAKEA SYMPOSIUM AT PAMUKKALE UNIVERSITY


The papers presented at the 7th BAKEA Symposium jointly organized by Departments of English, French and German Languages and Literatures on 15-16-17 September 2021 will be published as extended book chapters. Guidelines for submission of chapters are as follows:

  1. The chapters submitted must not below 4000 words and must not exceed 5000 words including the titles and bibliography.
  1. The chapters that do not comply with the guidelines cannot be processed and will be returned to the author.
  2. The authors should upload two copies of their research which are "With author info" and "Without author info" formats to the system. "With author info" format should contain ORCID information. The chapter to be evaluated must be anonymous.

4. The authors must attach their similarity report (taken from iThenticate or Turnitin). The chapters with a similarity of more than 15% cannot be considered for publication.



The Rules to Follow in the Chapters


1. It is necessary that papers submitted to the volume should not be previously published, nor should they be under consideration and evaluation for publication elsewhere.


2. Submitting their papers to be published in the volume, the authors agree to give the copyright of the papers to organizing committee of the BAKEA Symposium. The copyright of the papers published belongs to the editorial board comprised of the organizing committee. The authors will be required to sign a “copyright transfer form” by the publisher once the evaluation process has been over.

3. Scholarly, contextual, lingual and legal responsibility of the papers published in the journal belongs to the author(s) of the paper in question.

4. The papers should be written fully justified with 2,5 cm margin for each sides of the page. 10 point Times New Roman should be used and a single space should be left between the lines. Page numbers should be placed on the right lower corner. The whole of the paper, without bibliography, must not be lower than 4000 words and must not exceed 5000 words.

The papers should be written in Word for Windows software program as it is commonly used in computers in order to accelerate the procedures of composition, correction and publication. Also, it should be sent to the editors via e-mail in two copies, one with a page that describes the author and the other without it.


5. The title should be written with bold and capital letters in 13 point in the language of the paper.

6. The title, name and surname of the author(s) should be written in the middle below the title. The sign (*) should be placed at the end of the names to describe the institution, address and e-mail address of the author(s) at the bottom of the first page with the ORC-ID.

8. The papers should be written in accordance with the above guidelines and titles and subtitles should be written with a 1,25-cm indent. The main topic and sub-topics of the paper should be numbered in four levels at most as 1., 1.1, 1.1.1 and 1.1.1.1. The title in the first level should be wholly written in capital letter. The first letters of all the words of the titles in the other levels should be written in capital letter and the others in small letters; they should all be in 10-point and bold. Numbering shall be done in all the titles, including those of the introduction and conclusion parts. Paragraphs should be created with 0.5 cm indent. There should be no line spacing between paragraphs.

9. The writings in tables and figures should be written with single space and within the limits of the text. Title of the table should be numbered and given just above the top of the table in such a way as to give the content of the table. If the title of the table requires a second line, it should be aligned with the table number.


10. References should be shown within the text. If the quotation is taken from the reference without any change in it, namely in the same way as it is in the original, the whole of the quotation should be given in quotation marks. If the quotation is longer than a few sentences, it should be written in 10-point with a 1,25-cm indent from the right and left. Some examples concerning the references and quotation are given below:

Quotation from a single author: …………. The dominant power centres in the global world generalize their own truths … (Wallerstein, 2000: 206).

Quotation from two authors:……….. the focus on the necessary characteristics is striking (Bayraktaroğlu and Kutaniş, 2003: 45).

Quotation from more than one author: …………… suggestions regarding the aids  may be cited as examples for the social activistsr (Thompson et al., 2000: 328-338).

Quotation from more than one reference: ……………. First studies on human relations were carried out by Hawthorne Studies (Etzioni, 1964: 32;Sofer, 1972: 64).

11. Showing the references in the bibliography should be made as follows:

Referring a book: Eroğlu F. (2006). Davranış Bilimleri, 7. Baskı. İstanbul: Beta.

Referring a book that has been translated: Salam M.A. (1990). Güneyin Gelişmesinde Bilim, Teknoloji ve Bilim Eğitimi Üzerine Notlar, (Çev: O. Düzgüneş). Ankara. Kültür Bakanlığı Yayınları/1261, Bilim ve Teknoloji Yayınları Dizisi-5.

Referring an article: GebrekidonD.A.,&G.B.Awuah(2002).Interorganizational Cooperation: A New View of Strategic Alliances: The Case of Swedish Firms in the International Market, Industrial Marketing Management, 31/8, pp: 679-693.

Referring a part in an edited book: Nohria Nitin (1996), Is a Network Perspective a Useful Way of Studying Organizations?, Network and Organizations: Structure, Form, and Action, (Ed: N. Nohria and R.G. Eccles). Boston: Harvard Business School Press.

Referring an article published in a symposium book: Muller, A. L., & Ryan, R. M. (2001). The mind's outer eye. In Alaska Symposium on Perspectives. Vol. 43: Perspectives on perspective (pp. 237-288). Fairbanks: University of Alaska Press.

Referring an article presented in a conference but not published: Shimahara, N. K. (1983, November 18). Mobility and education of Buraku: The case of a Japanese minority.. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association, Chicago.

Referring an unpublished dissertation: Roberts, M.B. (2001). Land use and the law.. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Illinois.

Referring an article on internet: Lessing, J. P. (2001). The physics of cultural magnets. Journal of Anthropological Studies, 8, 273-299. Retrieved July 3, 2002, from http:// jas.org/2001-8-lessing.html.

Referring an internet document: Petrie Environmental Watch Center. (2002). Recent conservation legislation.. Retrieved August 3, 2002, from http://www.petriecenter. org/landuse/legislation/2.htm.


11. The resolutions of the photos (if used in the chapter) should not be lower than 300 dpi and be sent in jpg format.

12. A fee towards the cost of publication will be charged at the stage of publication.

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