Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
The Middle East Journal
Academic journal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The Middle East Journal is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Middle East Institute (Washington, D.C.). It was established in 1947[1] and covers research on the modern Middle East, including political, economic, and social developments and historical events in North Africa, the Middle East, Caucasus, and Central Asia. Jacob Passel is the current editor.
Remove ads
History
The Middle East Institute was founded in 1946 to promote the study of the region in a modern, policy-relevant context. From its outset, one of its priorities was "[t]he editing and publishing of an authoritative journal on Middle Eastern affairs."[2] Accordingly, the first issue of the journal appeared in January 1947.
Past Editors
- Harvey P. Hall, 1947–1956.[3]
- William Sands, 1956–1980.[3]
- Richard B. Parker, 1981–1987.[4]
- Jean Newsom, 1987–1990.[3]
- Christopher Van Hollen Sr., 1990–1992.[3]
- Eric Hooglund, 1992–1994.[3]
- Mary-Jane Deeb, 1995–1998.[3]
- Michael Collins Dunn, 1998–2018.
Current Contributors
Jacob Passel is the current editor. The current Book Review Editor is John Calabrese.
The Board of Advisory Editors include:
- Madawi Al-Rasheed
- Omar Ashour
- Henri Barkey
- Sheila Carapico
- Michael Collins Dunn
- Anoush Ehteshami
- Jean-Pierre Filiu
- F. Gregory Gause, III
- Michael M. Gunter
- Steven Heydemann
- J. N. C. Hill
- Frederic C. Hof
- Marc Lynch
- J. E. Peterson
- Michael W. S. Ryan
- Sabri Sayarı
- Samer S. Shehata
- Gareth Stansfield
- Robert Springborg
- Gönül Tol
- Edward (Ned) Walker
- Marvin G. Weinbaum[5]
- Paul Salem
- Ross Harrison
Remove ads
Abstracting and indexing
The journal is abstracted and indexed in the Book Review Index, Current Contents/Social & Behavioral Sciences,[6] EBSCO databases, Index Islamicus, International Political Science Abstracts, ProQuest databases, Scopus,[7] and the Social Sciences Citation Index.[6] According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2015 impact factor of 0.605.[8]
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads