Author's Guidelines for Paper Content and Structure
I. Author's Guidelines for Industry Articles
Practice oriented articles are written by architects,
engineers, and building construction professionals with other
practicing professionals in mind. These articles will be published
in the Industry section of the Journal of Green Building, Part
1, and are not peer reviewed. Academics who write with the professional
in mind and take an applied focus may also publish here. These
articles are reviewed by our in house editorial staff who will
offer suggestions for revision. The articles will also be professionally
copyedited and designed. All practice articles must adhere to
the highest standards of excellence and clarity.
Authors are encouraged to offer a rigorous coverage
of green building topics, applications, techniques, and processes.
The treatment of the building, architectural, or engineering
process ought to be covered in enough detail and with enough
supporting examples to enable a fellow practitioner to repeat
these processes in their future projects. The author and publisher
will agree at the outset on the general scope and aims of each
article. A minimum 6,000 word count is expected along with supporting
diagrams and photographs. The article must not have been published
previously and upon completion may not be published elsewhere
with the exception of the author's own promotional materials.
All authors are fully credited by name and contact information.
Please note that all submissions should be made
in the native word processing format and in a PDF format. Illustrations
should be saved at the highest resolution possible, with 600
dpi being a minimum. We can handle most image file formats.
A full description of submission guidelines, especially as related
to research articles, can be found under our submission guidelines
link.
| Submission of industry and research articles should be
directed to Publisher, Journal of Green Building
at collegepub@mindspring.com. |
II. Author's Guidelines for Research Articles
Papers submitted for consideration of publication
in the Journal of Green Building should advance the body
of knowledge related to green, sustainable, or high performance
built facilities and infrastructure systems. Acceptable paper
topics include original reviews of past practice, present information
of current interest, or exploration of new concepts pertinent
to green building. Manuscripts should be free of evident commercialism
or private interest, and all manuscripts of this nature will
be returned without review. However, case studies and descriptions
of new technologies are welcome, and in these papers it may
be appropriate to use proper names or other identifying information
to aid the reader's understanding. Papers should not have been
published previously, and authors will be required to sign a
copyright release form prior to publication certifying this
fact.
All papers will be reviewed by at least two peers
that are competent to evaluate the technical and professional
quality of the work. At least two positive reviews are required
for acceptance of the paper for publication, and two negative
reviews are grounds for rejection of the manuscript. Revisions,
with or without re-review, are often required conditions of
acceptance. Review criteria for papers include originality of
approach, concept, and/or application; intellectual merit of
approach and findings; significance of findings and potential
benefits and impact; and relevance to the domain of green, sustainable,
or high performance built facilities and infrastructure systems.
Both practical papers and theoretical papers are encouraged.
Topics of interest for the Journal span
the whole scope of the green building domain and include,
but are not limited to:
· Indicators of sustainability for built facilities
and infrastructure systems
· Mathematical and systems modeling of facilities and infrastructure
performance
· Integrated design and facility life cycle methods and practices
· Innovation and performance modeling for mechanical systems,
building envelopes, lighting, and other key facility systems
· Green building materials and structural innovations
· Building science, energy performance, and indoor environmental
quality issues
· Alternative project delivery methods for green building projects
· Information architectures for facilities data related to green
building
· Impacts of facilities on human performance
· Life cycle analysis and assessment methodologies and models
· Energy systems, conservation, and generation
· Water, stormwater, and wastewater systems
· Historic preservation and green building
· The built environment as industrial ecosystem
· Deconstruction methodologies and waste management innovations
· Sustainability and security in facility and infrastructure
design
· Prevention and sustainable mitigation of mold and other building
hazards
· Barriers to sustainability implementation
· Economics of green building and cost models/methods
· Operational frameworks for sustainability implementation
· Decision making and management of tradeoffs in green building
projects
· Research and education needs to support sustainability implementation
· Emerging technologies for sustainable facilities & infrastructure
Initial submittal of papers will be accepted via electronic
submission in Adobe Portable Document Format (pdf) as email
attachments not to exceed 10 MB in size to collegepub@mindspring.com.
Papers accepted for publication are to be submitted according
to the guidelines below. Authors
must also send along with their submission a signed release
form. Papers may also be submitted on an ongoing basis
for consideration in subsequent editions of the Journal,
which will be published four times per year.
The following subsections describe required and/or
suggested components to be included in the structure of papers
submitted to the Journal of Green Building:
Front Matter. Include a title for the
paper of no more than 100 characters, including spaces between
words. Authors should be listed sequentially by full name, with
any professional registrations or other designations abbreviated
after each name. A footnote should be included for each author
listing his or her title, organization, and contact information.
Abstract. Include an abstract of 150-175
words that describes the problem or question addressed in the
paper, the scope of the work and approach taken, and the key
conclusions or major findings. It should be written for a technical
audience and should avoid domain-specific jargon since the audience
for the Journal will include multiple disciplines related
to the built environment. Do not include mathematics or references
to other literature in the abstract.
Narrative. The maximum length for papers
submitted to the Journal of Green Building is 10,000
words. Special exceptions may be made for papers on topics that
cannot be sufficiently addressed within these limitations. Publication
standards of the primary author's domain or discipline (e.g.,
American Society of Civil Engineers, American Institute of Architects,
American Planning Association) should be consulted for issues
such as notation, units, and proper citation of references.
If no such standards exist, the default standard for publication
format and content shall be the American Society of Civil Engineers
Author's Guide - see http://www.asce.org
for more information. As a guideline, the narrative of the paper
should include the following key components as appropriate for
the content of the paper. Sections should be titled appropriately
to reflect the specific contents of each section. Not all papers
may fit this recommended structure, and authors should use their
discretion to develop a structure for the paper that is most
appropriate to clearly convey the information to the Journal's
audience. Recommended sections to include in the body of the
paper are:
Acknowledgments. Acknowledgements may be
included to recognize financial or technical support received
for the work described in the paper. They are not required for
manuscript submission.
Appendices. If necessary, appendices may
be included to provide additional detail or data essential to
understanding or replicability of work described in the paper.
All appendices should be clearly referenced at least once in
the main body of the paper. Appendices should be included when
estimating the total length of the paper.
References and Bibliography. All information
in the manuscript derived from other sources should be clearly
referenced in the body of the text using the author-date method.
For instance, one author might be cited as (Jones 2001), two
authors as (Jones and Lang 2001), and three authors or more
as (Jones et al. 2001). Direct quotes or other information linked
to specific locations in the text should include page numbers,
e.g., (Jones 2001, p. 35). Formatting of all sources listed
in the references and bibliography should follow the guidelines
of the primary author's domain, with the American Society of
Civil Engineers being the default format. Reference lists should
contain sources cited directly in the manuscript, and should
be included in all papers. Bibliographies may be included separately
to list other key resources of interest to the reader but not
specifically cited in the text.