Politics and the Life Sciences explained

Editors:Gregg R. Murray
Abbreviation:Politics Life Sci.
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Frequency:biannual
History:1982-present
Website:http://www.cambridge.org/pls
Link1-Name:Online access
Jstor:07309384
Oclc:46368130
Lccn:2001227164
Issn:0730-9384
Eissn:1471-5457

Politics and the Life Sciences (PLS) is a peer-reviewed academic journal that was first published in 1982 with Thomas Wiegele as the editor.[1] It is published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Association for Politics and the Life Sciences. Broadly speaking, PLS seeks to promote and disseminate peer-reviewed research on the relationship between biological mechanisms, broadly construed, and political behavior and institutions. It publishes rigorously conducted empirical research, both quantitative and qualitative, that tests clearly articulated theoretical assertions and rigorously argued theoretical essays that are intended to stimulate further scientific research. The journal welcomes the submission of full-length research articles and short research notes, meta-analyses, replications, introductions to new research tools, theoretical essays, and letters.

Editors

Indexing and archiving

The journal is indexed by International Political Science Abstracts and partially indexed in MEDLINE.

In January 2007 the journal was added to BioOne as part of its second collection BioOne.2,[2] and in October 2008 it was added to JSTOR with a 3-year moving wall.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Biology and political science . limited . Robert H. Blank . Samuel M. Hines . 7, 19 . . 2001 . 0-415-20436-4 .
  2. Analysis of BioOne Journal Collections: Their Quality, Indexing Coverage, and Scholarly Content . Lutishoor Salisbury . Carolyn Mills . 10.1080/10496500902802734 . . 10 . 2 . April 2009 . 113–123 . 62755859 .