THE ATLANTIC JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION



Gary Radford, Editor

The New Jersey Communication Association

The New York State Communication Association

Lawrence Erlbaum Associates

Editor
Gary P. Radford

Department of English, Communication, and Philosophy
M-MS3-01
Fairleigh Dickinson University
285 Madison Avenue
Madison, NJ 07940

Telephone: 973-443-8378 / FAX: 973-443-8713
E-mail: gradford@fdu.edu

The Atlantic Journal of Communication is the official publication of the New Jersey Communication Association and the New York State Communication Association. The journal is published by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates of Mahwah, New Jersey.

The Atlantic Journal of Communication (AJC), formerly the New Jersey Journal of Communication (NJJC), is an academic journal concerned with the study of communication theory, practice, and policy. The journal is philosophically committed to an eclectic approach to scholarship and the publication of articles of the highest quality regardless of their type, orientation, or geographical origin. Contributions devoted to significant problems and issues in communication studies and of wide professional and scholarly interest are welcomed. All manuscripts received are screened for publication through a blind review process.

The AJC has an Editorial Board consisting of communication scholars and practitioners from New Jersey, across the United States, and the United Kingdom. The AJC also has manuscript reviewers from around the world who specialize in all areas of communication scholarship.

The Atlantic Journal of Communication is published quarterly (March, June, September, and December). Subscription information is available from Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

Instructions for Authors

Authors should submit FIVE copies of their manuscript to the Editor at the address above. All submissions should not be under consideration by any other publisher. Manuscripts should typically not exceed 6,000 words or 25 double- spaced typed 8 1/2" x 11" pages, not including references. Tables and notes should be held to an absolute minimum. If any portion of the work has been presented as a convention paper, this information should be noted on the title page. A separate page should include a single paragraph abstract not exceeding 150 words. All manuscripts must conform to the style of the "Publication Manual of the APA" (5th ed.). If accepted, authors are required to make the manuscript available on a 3 1/2" floppy disk for publishing purposes.



This page maintained by Gary Radford and was last updated March 17, 2004.
Special thanks to Kurt Wagner, William Paterson University, and
Jon Oliver, The School of Communication, Information, and Library Studies, Rutgers University.