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Friday, March 4, 2011

International Journal of Electronic Commerce


Published/Hosted by:  Seidman School of Business, Grand Valley State University
ISSN: 1086-4415
Country: United States
Impact Factor: 0.85 (2010)

About Journal
The International Journal of Electronic Commerce is the leading refereed quarterly devoted to advancing the understanding and practice of electronic commerce. It serves the needs of researchers as well as practitioners and executives involved in electronic commerce. The Journal aims to offer an integrated view of the field by presenting approaches of multiple disciplines like, the marketplace and organizational effects of e-commerce, business and organizational transformation with e-commerce, business value in e-commerce Internet business models, supply chain management and collaborative commerce, e-tailing and multichannel selling, co-creation and consumer roles in e-commerce, online communities, social media and social networks, economics of electronic commerce, e-commerce in business globalization, e-marketplaces, marketing on the Web, m-commerce and pervasive computing, digital product management and property rights, security and privacy of transactions and information,
e-commerce payment systems.

Submission Process
Submit manuscripts online to zwass@fdu.edu

General Guidelines for Authors
Manuscripts submitted for review should be sent in as a single, complete Microsoft Word for Windows document, attached to the e-mail. The title should be followed by the abstract and the keywords. To enable double-blind review, the authors should not be identified anywhere in the manuscript. The other attachment to the submission should be a letter identifying all the authors, with full contact information. The corresponding author should be named. Brief biographical statements of all authors should be included. The text should be double-spaced in the 8.5 * 11 format and 12 point font size, allowing ample margins. All figures and tables should be placed on separate pages at the end of the file and be in common Microsoft formats. Their approximate placement should be indicated in the text.

References
The references should be arranged alphabetically according to the name of the first author or editor, and numbered. Citations in the text, referring to this list, should be made as numbers in square brackets, e.g., [9]. References to unpublished works should be avoided. References should be provided as follows:

Journal articles
17. Grover, V. and Davenport, T.H. General perspectives on knowledge management: fostering a research agenda. Journal of Management Information Systems, 18, 1 (Summer 2001), 5-21.

Books
33. Nohria, N.; Dyer, D.; and Dalzell, F. Changing Fortunes: Remaking the Industrial Corporation. New York: Wiley, 2002.

Web pages
References to Web pages should begin with the authors (if known) and title of the content (as above), followed by the URL, and by the date of the most recent access ("Accessed on…").

For detailed guidelines, click here.