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Last Call of the European Journal of International Management

  • 1.  Last Call of the European Journal of International Management

    Posted 07-09-2017 17:09

    REMINDER

    *Apologies for cross-posting*
    CALL FOR MANUSCRITPS OPEN
    Special Issue on Research Methods in International Management (EJIM is an indexed-ranked journal of TR)
     
    The purpose of this European Journal of International Management Special Issue is to explore quantitative and qualitative research methods in international management by considering both new methods and new ways of using traditional methods. New research methods in management may emerge in response to the definition of a problem or the research conducted by other scholars. The emergence of new tools, techniques and software as well as changes in the environment under study that require new sources of information also offer opportunities to develop and employ new methods.

    Many researchers believe that good theory followed by bad methods hinders their ability to create theory by generalising findings to other temporal and geographical contexts (Lewin, 1945; Tsoukas, 1989). For example, real-world relationships are often asymmetrical, and although multiple regression analysis is effective at identifying symmetric relationships, it sometimes fails to capture relationships of asymmetry. Qualitative comparative analysis can help overcome this problem (Fiss, 2011; Mendel and Korjani, 2013). Each management method is a lens that allows us to interpret one or more forms of management and to seek a variety of solutions to new or existing problems. Hence, a critical review of these methods and careful analysis of the resulting conclusions is crucial. Management in different economies, sectors and businesses depends on the results arising from different methods.

    Scientific research uses different quantitative and/or qualitative methods provide different answers to problems. In management, the language used in research is important to enable communication between academia and researchers during both data collection and the dissemination of findings. Contrasting different studies (or even the same study) using different methods reduces the gap between theory and practice because it leads to the generalisation of findings and ensures that the theory can become more widely used.

    The Special Issue editors seek management research papers that present new solutions using quantitative approaches, qualitative analysis as an alternative to traditional quantitative methods, or examples and applications of new methods. The aims of this Special Issue are to provide high quality empirical evidence using multiple methods and to present papers that discuss different empirical perspectives. Papers that combine different research methods are particularly welcome. The Special Issue editors are open to imaginative and interesting ideas that fit within the spirit of this call for papers and the topics of the EJIM. Papers might cover, but are not limited to, the following topics:
    -    Perspectives and techniques in management research;
    -    Quantitative and qualitative methodological proposals by researchers;
    -    Comparisons between quantitative and qualitative methods;
    -    Consolidation and application of the most relevant methods and criticism of certain aspects of other methods (e.g., their implications or even their fundamental proposals);
    -    New methods (if applicable), new forms and applications of traditional methods in management research;
    -    Tools and techniques in content analysis, text analysis software applied to different settings and topics;
    -    Predictive validation testing of models using hold-out samples and testing for causal asymmetry in previous studies;
    -    Forms of hybridisation between qualitative and quantitative techniques in management research;
    -    Differences in methodology and concepts when comparing approaches across different empirical studies;
    -    Discrepancies, criticism and debate of papers published in refereed journals;
    -    Other new qualitative research methods or techniques and new ways of applying traditional quantitative methods in management research.

    Submissions should not have been previously published, nor should they be under consideration for publication elsewhere. A title of twelve words or fewer should be provided. Although a description of the method is optional, its empirical applications and the potential methodological advancements that increase its usefulness in management research and practice should be emphasized, as should the method's limitations. All manuscripts should adhere to the guidelines of the European Journal of International Management and should be completely free of spelling and grammar errors. Further information and guidelines for authors are available at:
    http://www.inderscience.com/jhome.php?jcode=ejim
    Send one copy as an MS Word file attached to the contact guest editor.
    All manuscripts will be desk reviewed by the guest editors and, if deemed suitable, will be sent to two reviewers for double-blind peer review.
    If you have any questions about the suitability of topics or approaches please contact the guest editors, Domingo Enrique Ribeiro-Soriano (Universitat de València, Spain,
    ribeders@uv.es), Naveen Donthu (Georgia State University, USA, ndonthu@gsu.edu), and Maite del Val (University of Alcala, Spain, mteresa.val@uah.es). Contact guest editor: Domingo Enrique Ribeiro-Soriano. 

    Timeline:
    Submission of full paper: 31 July 2017
    First-round feedback from referees: 31 October 2017
    Submission of revised paper: 31 December 2017
    Second-round feedback from referees: 31 January 2018
    Submission of final revised paper (to the editor): 28 February 2018
    Publication: 2019

    Fiss, P.C. (2011). Building better causal theories: A fuzzy set approach to typologies in organization research. Academy of Management Journal, Vol. 54, 393-420.
    Lewin, K. (1945). The research center for group dynamics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Sociometry, Vol. 8, 126-135.
    Mendel, J.M. and & Korjani, M.M. (2013). Theoretical aspects of Fuzzy Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis (fsQCA). Information Sciences, Vol. 237, 137-161.
    Tsoukas, H. (1989). The validity of ideographic research explanations.
    Academy of Management Review, Vol. 14, 551-561.

    Best regards