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Back Matter Source: British Journal of Political Science, Vol. 26, No. 2 (Apr., 1996) Published by: Cambridge University Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/194045 . Accessed: 09/05/2014 00:52 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Cambridge University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to British Journal of Political Science. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Fri, 9 May 2014 00:52:49 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
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Page 1: Back Matter

Back MatterSource: British Journal of Political Science, Vol. 26, No. 2 (Apr., 1996)Published by: Cambridge University PressStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/194045 .

Accessed: 09/05/2014 00:52

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

Cambridge University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to BritishJournal of Political Science.

http://www.jstor.org

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Fri, 9 May 2014 00:52:49 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 2: Back Matter

Nations and Nationalism Journal of the Association for the Study of

Ethnicity and Nationalism Editors

Anthony Smith, London School ofEconomics, Obi Patience Igwara, University ofWarwick, Kelvin Knight, University ofNorth London, Athena Leoussi, University of Reading, Terry Mulhall, London SchoolofEconomics

Nationalism is the central issue of the modern world. Since the demise of the Soviet Union there has been a proliferation of nationalism and ethnic conflict. The consequent explosion of interest in nationalism has created an urgent need for systematic study in this field. Nations and Nationalism aims to satisfy this need. The journal is published three times a year and includes original studies - theoretical, empirical and historical - of a range of issues in the field together with review articles and book reviews. Special issues will highlight subjects and areas of current interest. The journal covers all areas of the world.

Nations and Nationalism Journal of the Association for the Study of

Ethnicity and Nationalism Editors

Anthony Smith, London School ofEconomics, Obi Patience Igwara, University ofWarwick, Kelvin Knight, University ofNorth London, Athena Leoussi, University of Reading, Terry Mulhall, London SchoolofEconomics

Nationalism is the central issue of the modern world. Since the demise of the Soviet Union there has been a proliferation of nationalism and ethnic conflict. The consequent explosion of interest in nationalism has created an urgent need for systematic study in this field. Nations and Nationalism aims to satisfy this need. The journal is published three times a year and includes original studies - theoretical, empirical and historical - of a range of issues in the field together with review articles and book reviews. Special issues will highlight subjects and areas of current interest. The journal covers all areas of the world.

Nations and Nationalism Journal of the Association for the Study of

Ethnicity and Nationalism Editors

Anthony Smith, London School ofEconomics, Obi Patience Igwara, University ofWarwick, Kelvin Knight, University ofNorth London, Athena Leoussi, University of Reading, Terry Mulhall, London SchoolofEconomics

Nationalism is the central issue of the modern world. Since the demise of the Soviet Union there has been a proliferation of nationalism and ethnic conflict. The consequent explosion of interest in nationalism has created an urgent need for systematic study in this field. Nations and Nationalism aims to satisfy this need. The journal is published three times a year and includes original studies - theoretical, empirical and historical - of a range of issues in the field together with review articles and book reviews. Special issues will highlight subjects and areas of current interest. The journal covers all areas of the world.

Coverage includes: * Theories of nationalism * History and national identty * Language and nationalism * Religion and nationalism * Class and nationalism * Race and nationalism * Gender and nationalism * Democracy and multinational states * Post-modernity and the nation * Space and nationalism * Mass media and nationalism * Art and nationalism * Imperialism and nationalism * Secession and irredentism * Nation states and international society

Subscription Nations and Nationalism is published in March, July and November. Volume 2, 1996 is ?59 for institutions; ?36 for individuals; Special arrangements exist for Asso- ciation for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism members; airmail is ?14 per year extra. ISSN 1354-5078

Coverage includes: * Theories of nationalism * History and national identty * Language and nationalism * Religion and nationalism * Class and nationalism * Race and nationalism * Gender and nationalism * Democracy and multinational states * Post-modernity and the nation * Space and nationalism * Mass media and nationalism * Art and nationalism * Imperialism and nationalism * Secession and irredentism * Nation states and international society

Subscription Nations and Nationalism is published in March, July and November. Volume 2, 1996 is ?59 for institutions; ?36 for individuals; Special arrangements exist for Asso- ciation for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism members; airmail is ?14 per year extra. ISSN 1354-5078

Coverage includes: * Theories of nationalism * History and national identty * Language and nationalism * Religion and nationalism * Class and nationalism * Race and nationalism * Gender and nationalism * Democracy and multinational states * Post-modernity and the nation * Space and nationalism * Mass media and nationalism * Art and nationalism * Imperialism and nationalism * Secession and irredentism * Nation states and international society

Subscription Nations and Nationalism is published in March, July and November. Volume 2, 1996 is ?59 for institutions; ?36 for individuals; Special arrangements exist for Asso- ciation for the Study of Ethnicity and Nationalism members; airmail is ?14 per year extra. ISSN 1354-5078

r--- - n ITake a closer look FREE! I I Please send me a free sample copy of I

Nations and Nationalism I I O Please send me further information I

IName

Address I I I I

r--- - n ITake a closer look FREE! I I Please send me a free sample copy of I

Nations and Nationalism I I O Please send me further information I

IName

Address I I I I

r--- - n ITake a closer look FREE! I I Please send me a free sample copy of I

Nations and Nationalism I I O Please send me further information I

IName

Address I I I I i i

Send to: Journals Marketing Department, Cambridge University Press, FREEPOST*, The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge, CB2 IBR, UK. Tel: +44 (0)1223 325806 Fax: +44 (0)1223 315052 I Email: [email protected] (*no postage stamp necessary if posted in UK)

In USA, Canada & Mexico, write to: Cambridge University Press, 40 West 20th Street, New York, NY 10011-4211

USA. CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS :~

i i

Send to: Journals Marketing Department, Cambridge University Press, FREEPOST*, The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge, CB2 IBR, UK. Tel: +44 (0)1223 325806 Fax: +44 (0)1223 315052 I Email: [email protected] (*no postage stamp necessary if posted in UK)

In USA, Canada & Mexico, write to: Cambridge University Press, 40 West 20th Street, New York, NY 10011-4211

USA. CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS :~

i i

Send to: Journals Marketing Department, Cambridge University Press, FREEPOST*, The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge, CB2 IBR, UK. Tel: +44 (0)1223 325806 Fax: +44 (0)1223 315052 I Email: [email protected] (*no postage stamp necessary if posted in UK)

In USA, Canada & Mexico, write to: Cambridge University Press, 40 West 20th Street, New York, NY 10011-4211

USA. CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS :~

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Fri, 9 May 2014 00:52:49 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 3: Back Matter

Review of International Studies Review of International Studies Review of International Studies Editor Paul Taylor London School of Economics

Established in 1974 as the flagship journal ofthe British International Studies Association, Review ofInternational Studies serves the needs of scholars in politics, law, history and all other areas of social science in the international arena.

Wide-ranging Review of International Studies is a journal which no library on international relations can be without. Its scope is wide-ranging both in terms of subject matter and method. It covers all topics from international organization and intercultur- al communication to political economy and war cultures. It is receptive to new methodologies and draws on the expertise of other disciplines, such as sociology and psychology, to throw light on the study of international relations. Review of International Studies takes a strong interdisci-

plinary perspective.

Review of International Studies ... * contains articles of lasting importance * is genuinely interdisciplinary * is committed to serious scholarship * has contributors from round the world * is a journal for professionals

A selection of recent contents Realizing sovereignty NAEEM INA YA TULLAH e6 DA VID BLANEY

The Maastricht Treaty, Economic and

Monetary Union and the neo-realist research

programme JOSEPH M. GRIECO

The Changing Israeli strategic equation: toward a security regime EFRAIM INBAR 6' SHMUEL SANDLER

Morgenthau's strugglewith power: the theory of

power politics and the Cold War

JAAP W NOBEL

Editor Paul Taylor London School of Economics

Established in 1974 as the flagship journal ofthe British International Studies Association, Review ofInternational Studies serves the needs of scholars in politics, law, history and all other areas of social science in the international arena.

Wide-ranging Review of International Studies is a journal which no library on international relations can be without. Its scope is wide-ranging both in terms of subject matter and method. It covers all topics from international organization and intercultur- al communication to political economy and war cultures. It is receptive to new methodologies and draws on the expertise of other disciplines, such as sociology and psychology, to throw light on the study of international relations. Review of International Studies takes a strong interdisci-

plinary perspective.

Review of International Studies ... * contains articles of lasting importance * is genuinely interdisciplinary * is committed to serious scholarship * has contributors from round the world * is a journal for professionals

A selection of recent contents Realizing sovereignty NAEEM INA YA TULLAH e6 DA VID BLANEY

The Maastricht Treaty, Economic and

Monetary Union and the neo-realist research

programme JOSEPH M. GRIECO

The Changing Israeli strategic equation: toward a security regime EFRAIM INBAR 6' SHMUEL SANDLER

Morgenthau's strugglewith power: the theory of

power politics and the Cold War

JAAP W NOBEL

Editor Paul Taylor London School of Economics

Established in 1974 as the flagship journal ofthe British International Studies Association, Review ofInternational Studies serves the needs of scholars in politics, law, history and all other areas of social science in the international arena.

Wide-ranging Review of International Studies is a journal which no library on international relations can be without. Its scope is wide-ranging both in terms of subject matter and method. It covers all topics from international organization and intercultur- al communication to political economy and war cultures. It is receptive to new methodologies and draws on the expertise of other disciplines, such as sociology and psychology, to throw light on the study of international relations. Review of International Studies takes a strong interdisci-

plinary perspective.

Review of International Studies ... * contains articles of lasting importance * is genuinely interdisciplinary * is committed to serious scholarship * has contributors from round the world * is a journal for professionals

A selection of recent contents Realizing sovereignty NAEEM INA YA TULLAH e6 DA VID BLANEY

The Maastricht Treaty, Economic and

Monetary Union and the neo-realist research

programme JOSEPH M. GRIECO

The Changing Israeli strategic equation: toward a security regime EFRAIM INBAR 6' SHMUEL SANDLER

Morgenthau's strugglewith power: the theory of

power politics and the Cold War

JAAP W NOBEL

The relevance of international law: a Hegelian interpretation of a peculiar seventeenth-century preoccupation ERIK RINGMAR

Perception, causation and German foreign policy MICHAEL JURICIC

Explaining the emergence of great power concerts BENJAMIN MILLER

The historiography of academic international relations BRIAN C. SCHMIDT

Subscription Review of International Studies, Volume 22, 1996 is published quarterly in January, April, July and October at ?56 for institutions and ?38 for individ- uals. Airmail is ?16 per year extra. ISSN 0260-2105.

Take a closer look FREE! Please send me a free sample copy of Review of International Studies

O Please send me further information

Name

Address

Please send to: Journals Marketing Dept., Cambridge University Press, 'FREEPOST, The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge, CBa IBR, UK

Td: +44 (0)1223 325806 Fax: +44 (0)1223 315052 Email: [email protected] ('no postage stamp necessary if posed in UK)

I I In USA, Canada & Mexico, write to:

Cambridge University Press, 40 West 20th Street, I New York, NY 10011-4211, USA.

1C MCAMBRIDGE i UNIVERSITY PRESS [

The relevance of international law: a Hegelian interpretation of a peculiar seventeenth-century preoccupation ERIK RINGMAR

Perception, causation and German foreign policy MICHAEL JURICIC

Explaining the emergence of great power concerts BENJAMIN MILLER

The historiography of academic international relations BRIAN C. SCHMIDT

Subscription Review of International Studies, Volume 22, 1996 is published quarterly in January, April, July and October at ?56 for institutions and ?38 for individ- uals. Airmail is ?16 per year extra. ISSN 0260-2105.

Take a closer look FREE! Please send me a free sample copy of Review of International Studies

O Please send me further information

Name

Address

Please send to: Journals Marketing Dept., Cambridge University Press, 'FREEPOST, The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge, CBa IBR, UK

Td: +44 (0)1223 325806 Fax: +44 (0)1223 315052 Email: [email protected] ('no postage stamp necessary if posed in UK)

I I In USA, Canada & Mexico, write to:

Cambridge University Press, 40 West 20th Street, I New York, NY 10011-4211, USA.

1C MCAMBRIDGE i UNIVERSITY PRESS [

The relevance of international law: a Hegelian interpretation of a peculiar seventeenth-century preoccupation ERIK RINGMAR

Perception, causation and German foreign policy MICHAEL JURICIC

Explaining the emergence of great power concerts BENJAMIN MILLER

The historiography of academic international relations BRIAN C. SCHMIDT

Subscription Review of International Studies, Volume 22, 1996 is published quarterly in January, April, July and October at ?56 for institutions and ?38 for individ- uals. Airmail is ?16 per year extra. ISSN 0260-2105.

Take a closer look FREE! Please send me a free sample copy of Review of International Studies

O Please send me further information

Name

Address

Please send to: Journals Marketing Dept., Cambridge University Press, 'FREEPOST, The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge, CBa IBR, UK

Td: +44 (0)1223 325806 Fax: +44 (0)1223 315052 Email: [email protected] ('no postage stamp necessary if posed in UK)

I I In USA, Canada & Mexico, write to:

Cambridge University Press, 40 West 20th Street, I New York, NY 10011-4211, USA.

1C MCAMBRIDGE i UNIVERSITY PRESS [

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Fri, 9 May 2014 00:52:49 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 4: Back Matter

Notes for Contributors I All contributions should be sent to: The Editors, British Journal of Political Science, University of Essex, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester, Essex C04 3SQ, UK. They should not be sent to the Cambridge University Press or to the Editorial Assistant.

2 Articles submitted to the Journal should in general be between 5,000 and 12,000 words (or equivalent in tables and figures) in length. An abstract not exceeding 120 words is required. Contributors should note the Journal's editorial policy, which is as stated inside the front cover. 3 Notes and Comments are welcome. A Note should contain a body of original information, a new method for doing something or a new idea (speculation, argument, proof, etc.) presented in a brief and unadorned form without inessential commentary. Comments containing criticisms of articles published in the Journal and additional thoughts on them will be considered for early publication, especially if they are short - say, under 1,000 words. 4 Most issues of the Journal contain a Review Article - either a detailed discussion of a single book or a review of the state of some area of the discipline. Review Articles submitted without prior consultation will be considered for publication, but in their own interest contributors would be well advised not to prepare a Review Article specially for the Journal without first getting in touch with the Editors.

5 Authors of articles and Review Articles receive twenty-five free offprints. Additional copies may be bought if they are ordered at proof stage. 6 Submission of an article is taken to imply that it has not been previously published and is not being considered for publication elsewhere. Copyright is normally assigned to the Cambridge University Press. 7 Authors should submit FOUR COPIES of their articles. Contributions must be typed and may be reproduced in any clearly legible form. The preferred size of paper is A4 (8'/4 x I11 / in), but quarto (8 x 10 in) or the US standard size (8'/, x 11 in) will also be accepted. Because of postage costs, manuscripts not accepted for publication are not normally returned to the authors unless their return is specifically requested. 8 The entire material of any article, including footnotes, quotations, appendices, etc., should be double spaced, with left-hand margins of at least 1'/2 in. Footnotes should be numbered consecutively in the text and typed double spaced all together at the end, beginning on a fresh page. 9 Anyone who is preparing a manuscript for submission to the Journal is urged to follow the Journal's style sheet, which covers a number of detailed points concerning footnotes, punctuation, spelling, etc. Copies of the style sheet can be obtained from the Editors. Footnote references should always contain, in the case of books, the name of the author as it appears on the title page, the full title including any subtitle, the place of publication, the name of the publisher and the date of publication, and, in the case of articles, the name of the author, the full title, the name of the journal, the volume number, the year and the page reference (number of first and last page). 10 When an article has been accepted for publication, the author is strongly encouraged to send a copy of the final version on computer disk (Apple Macintosh or IBM compatible PC) together with the hard copy typescript, giving details of the wordprocessing software used (Microsoft Word, Word or Word Perfect). However, the publisher reserves the right to typeset material by conventional means if an author's disk proves unsatisfactory. 11 First proofs may be read and corrected by contributors provided that they can give the Editors an address through which they can be reached without delay and can guarantee to return the corrected proofs to the Editor, by air mail where appropriate, within ten days of receiving them. The master proof will always be sent directly to the Editors by the printer; contributors will receive duplicates. 12 Where statistical analysis of data has been conducted, contributors are expected to deposit a REPLICATION DATA SET with a major national data archive.

COPYING This journal is registered with the Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, Mass. 01923, USA. Organizations in the USA who are also registered with C.C.C. may therefore copy material (beyond the limits permitted by sections 107 and 108 of US copyright law) subject to payment to C.C.C. of the per copy fee of $7.50. This consent does not extend to multiple copying for promotional or commercial purposes Code 0007-1234/96 $7.50 + .10.

Organizations authorized by the Copyright Licensing Agency may also copy material subject to the usual conditions.

ABSTRACTING AND INDEXING The journal is listed in the major relevant abstracting and indexing services worldwide, including ABC Political Science, Automated Subject Citation Alert, America History and Life, Applied Social Science Index and Abstracts, Current Contents, Historical Abstracts, International Political Science Abstracts, Sage Public Administration Abstracts, Social Sciences Index, Studies on Women Abstracts.

Notes for Contributors I All contributions should be sent to: The Editors, British Journal of Political Science, University of Essex, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester, Essex C04 3SQ, UK. They should not be sent to the Cambridge University Press or to the Editorial Assistant.

2 Articles submitted to the Journal should in general be between 5,000 and 12,000 words (or equivalent in tables and figures) in length. An abstract not exceeding 120 words is required. Contributors should note the Journal's editorial policy, which is as stated inside the front cover. 3 Notes and Comments are welcome. A Note should contain a body of original information, a new method for doing something or a new idea (speculation, argument, proof, etc.) presented in a brief and unadorned form without inessential commentary. Comments containing criticisms of articles published in the Journal and additional thoughts on them will be considered for early publication, especially if they are short - say, under 1,000 words. 4 Most issues of the Journal contain a Review Article - either a detailed discussion of a single book or a review of the state of some area of the discipline. Review Articles submitted without prior consultation will be considered for publication, but in their own interest contributors would be well advised not to prepare a Review Article specially for the Journal without first getting in touch with the Editors.

5 Authors of articles and Review Articles receive twenty-five free offprints. Additional copies may be bought if they are ordered at proof stage. 6 Submission of an article is taken to imply that it has not been previously published and is not being considered for publication elsewhere. Copyright is normally assigned to the Cambridge University Press. 7 Authors should submit FOUR COPIES of their articles. Contributions must be typed and may be reproduced in any clearly legible form. The preferred size of paper is A4 (8'/4 x I11 / in), but quarto (8 x 10 in) or the US standard size (8'/, x 11 in) will also be accepted. Because of postage costs, manuscripts not accepted for publication are not normally returned to the authors unless their return is specifically requested. 8 The entire material of any article, including footnotes, quotations, appendices, etc., should be double spaced, with left-hand margins of at least 1'/2 in. Footnotes should be numbered consecutively in the text and typed double spaced all together at the end, beginning on a fresh page. 9 Anyone who is preparing a manuscript for submission to the Journal is urged to follow the Journal's style sheet, which covers a number of detailed points concerning footnotes, punctuation, spelling, etc. Copies of the style sheet can be obtained from the Editors. Footnote references should always contain, in the case of books, the name of the author as it appears on the title page, the full title including any subtitle, the place of publication, the name of the publisher and the date of publication, and, in the case of articles, the name of the author, the full title, the name of the journal, the volume number, the year and the page reference (number of first and last page). 10 When an article has been accepted for publication, the author is strongly encouraged to send a copy of the final version on computer disk (Apple Macintosh or IBM compatible PC) together with the hard copy typescript, giving details of the wordprocessing software used (Microsoft Word, Word or Word Perfect). However, the publisher reserves the right to typeset material by conventional means if an author's disk proves unsatisfactory. 11 First proofs may be read and corrected by contributors provided that they can give the Editors an address through which they can be reached without delay and can guarantee to return the corrected proofs to the Editor, by air mail where appropriate, within ten days of receiving them. The master proof will always be sent directly to the Editors by the printer; contributors will receive duplicates. 12 Where statistical analysis of data has been conducted, contributors are expected to deposit a REPLICATION DATA SET with a major national data archive.

COPYING This journal is registered with the Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, Mass. 01923, USA. Organizations in the USA who are also registered with C.C.C. may therefore copy material (beyond the limits permitted by sections 107 and 108 of US copyright law) subject to payment to C.C.C. of the per copy fee of $7.50. This consent does not extend to multiple copying for promotional or commercial purposes Code 0007-1234/96 $7.50 + .10.

Organizations authorized by the Copyright Licensing Agency may also copy material subject to the usual conditions.

ABSTRACTING AND INDEXING The journal is listed in the major relevant abstracting and indexing services worldwide, including ABC Political Science, Automated Subject Citation Alert, America History and Life, Applied Social Science Index and Abstracts, Current Contents, Historical Abstracts, International Political Science Abstracts, Sage Public Administration Abstracts, Social Sciences Index, Studies on Women Abstracts.

Notes for Contributors I All contributions should be sent to: The Editors, British Journal of Political Science, University of Essex, Wivenhoe Park, Colchester, Essex C04 3SQ, UK. They should not be sent to the Cambridge University Press or to the Editorial Assistant.

2 Articles submitted to the Journal should in general be between 5,000 and 12,000 words (or equivalent in tables and figures) in length. An abstract not exceeding 120 words is required. Contributors should note the Journal's editorial policy, which is as stated inside the front cover. 3 Notes and Comments are welcome. A Note should contain a body of original information, a new method for doing something or a new idea (speculation, argument, proof, etc.) presented in a brief and unadorned form without inessential commentary. Comments containing criticisms of articles published in the Journal and additional thoughts on them will be considered for early publication, especially if they are short - say, under 1,000 words. 4 Most issues of the Journal contain a Review Article - either a detailed discussion of a single book or a review of the state of some area of the discipline. Review Articles submitted without prior consultation will be considered for publication, but in their own interest contributors would be well advised not to prepare a Review Article specially for the Journal without first getting in touch with the Editors.

5 Authors of articles and Review Articles receive twenty-five free offprints. Additional copies may be bought if they are ordered at proof stage. 6 Submission of an article is taken to imply that it has not been previously published and is not being considered for publication elsewhere. Copyright is normally assigned to the Cambridge University Press. 7 Authors should submit FOUR COPIES of their articles. Contributions must be typed and may be reproduced in any clearly legible form. The preferred size of paper is A4 (8'/4 x I11 / in), but quarto (8 x 10 in) or the US standard size (8'/, x 11 in) will also be accepted. Because of postage costs, manuscripts not accepted for publication are not normally returned to the authors unless their return is specifically requested. 8 The entire material of any article, including footnotes, quotations, appendices, etc., should be double spaced, with left-hand margins of at least 1'/2 in. Footnotes should be numbered consecutively in the text and typed double spaced all together at the end, beginning on a fresh page. 9 Anyone who is preparing a manuscript for submission to the Journal is urged to follow the Journal's style sheet, which covers a number of detailed points concerning footnotes, punctuation, spelling, etc. Copies of the style sheet can be obtained from the Editors. Footnote references should always contain, in the case of books, the name of the author as it appears on the title page, the full title including any subtitle, the place of publication, the name of the publisher and the date of publication, and, in the case of articles, the name of the author, the full title, the name of the journal, the volume number, the year and the page reference (number of first and last page). 10 When an article has been accepted for publication, the author is strongly encouraged to send a copy of the final version on computer disk (Apple Macintosh or IBM compatible PC) together with the hard copy typescript, giving details of the wordprocessing software used (Microsoft Word, Word or Word Perfect). However, the publisher reserves the right to typeset material by conventional means if an author's disk proves unsatisfactory. 11 First proofs may be read and corrected by contributors provided that they can give the Editors an address through which they can be reached without delay and can guarantee to return the corrected proofs to the Editor, by air mail where appropriate, within ten days of receiving them. The master proof will always be sent directly to the Editors by the printer; contributors will receive duplicates. 12 Where statistical analysis of data has been conducted, contributors are expected to deposit a REPLICATION DATA SET with a major national data archive.

COPYING This journal is registered with the Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, Mass. 01923, USA. Organizations in the USA who are also registered with C.C.C. may therefore copy material (beyond the limits permitted by sections 107 and 108 of US copyright law) subject to payment to C.C.C. of the per copy fee of $7.50. This consent does not extend to multiple copying for promotional or commercial purposes Code 0007-1234/96 $7.50 + .10.

Organizations authorized by the Copyright Licensing Agency may also copy material subject to the usual conditions.

ABSTRACTING AND INDEXING The journal is listed in the major relevant abstracting and indexing services worldwide, including ABC Political Science, Automated Subject Citation Alert, America History and Life, Applied Social Science Index and Abstracts, Current Contents, Historical Abstracts, International Political Science Abstracts, Sage Public Administration Abstracts, Social Sciences Index, Studies on Women Abstracts.

This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Fri, 9 May 2014 00:52:49 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 5: Back Matter

British Journal of Political Science VOLUME 26 PART 2 APRIL 1996

page

ARTICLES

British Journal of Political Science VOLUME 26 PART 2 APRIL 1996

page

ARTICLES

British Journal of Political Science VOLUME 26 PART 2 APRIL 1996

page

ARTICLES

143 ANDRE BLAIS AND M. MARTIN BOYER

Assessing the Impact of Televised Debates: The Case of the 1988 Canadian Election

165 ERIC C. BROWNE AND KEITH E. HAMM

Legislative Politics and the Paradox of Voting: Electoral Reform in Fourth

Republic France

199 CHRISTOPHE CROMBEZ

Legislative Procedures in the European Community

229 PHILIP JONES AND JOHN HUDSON The Quality of Political Leadership: A Case Study oT John Major

245 RICHARD NADEAU, RICHARD G. NIEMI AND TIMOTHY AMATO

Prospective and Comparative or Retrospective and Individual? Party Leaders and

Party Support in Great Britain

NOTES AND COMMENTS

259 GARY W. COX AND FRANCES ROSENBLUTH Factional Competition for the Party Endorsement: The Case of Japan's Liberal Democratic Party

269 STtPHANE DION

Why is Secession Difficult in Well-Established Democracies? Lessons from

Quebec

283 JAMES R. SCARRITT Measuring Political Change: The Quantity and Effectiveness of Electoral and

Party Participation in the Zambian One-Party State, 1973-91

143 ANDRE BLAIS AND M. MARTIN BOYER

Assessing the Impact of Televised Debates: The Case of the 1988 Canadian Election

165 ERIC C. BROWNE AND KEITH E. HAMM

Legislative Politics and the Paradox of Voting: Electoral Reform in Fourth

Republic France

199 CHRISTOPHE CROMBEZ

Legislative Procedures in the European Community

229 PHILIP JONES AND JOHN HUDSON The Quality of Political Leadership: A Case Study oT John Major

245 RICHARD NADEAU, RICHARD G. NIEMI AND TIMOTHY AMATO

Prospective and Comparative or Retrospective and Individual? Party Leaders and

Party Support in Great Britain

NOTES AND COMMENTS

259 GARY W. COX AND FRANCES ROSENBLUTH Factional Competition for the Party Endorsement: The Case of Japan's Liberal Democratic Party

269 STtPHANE DION

Why is Secession Difficult in Well-Established Democracies? Lessons from

Quebec

283 JAMES R. SCARRITT Measuring Political Change: The Quantity and Effectiveness of Electoral and

Party Participation in the Zambian One-Party State, 1973-91

143 ANDRE BLAIS AND M. MARTIN BOYER

Assessing the Impact of Televised Debates: The Case of the 1988 Canadian Election

165 ERIC C. BROWNE AND KEITH E. HAMM

Legislative Politics and the Paradox of Voting: Electoral Reform in Fourth

Republic France

199 CHRISTOPHE CROMBEZ

Legislative Procedures in the European Community

229 PHILIP JONES AND JOHN HUDSON The Quality of Political Leadership: A Case Study oT John Major

245 RICHARD NADEAU, RICHARD G. NIEMI AND TIMOTHY AMATO

Prospective and Comparative or Retrospective and Individual? Party Leaders and

Party Support in Great Britain

NOTES AND COMMENTS

259 GARY W. COX AND FRANCES ROSENBLUTH Factional Competition for the Party Endorsement: The Case of Japan's Liberal Democratic Party

269 STtPHANE DION

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