Aims & Scope
The Eurasiatica. Quaderni di Studi su Balcani, Anatolia, Iran, Caucaso e Asia Centrale series was created to deal specifically with a vast, composite but interrelated area which, in addition to its traditional historical-cultural relevance, is taking on growing political and economic importance. The placement of this series within Edizioni Ca’ Foscari originates at the same time from a strong tradition of studies on the Balkans, Caucasus and Central Asia in our University, where the main languages of these regions are taught - Albanian, Bulgarian, Neo-Greek, Romanian, Serbo-Croatian, Russian, Persian, Turkish and Armenian. The studies published in this series aim to provide a high-level scientific tool with a multidisciplinary character in various research fields (archeology, art, anthropology, ethnology and ethnomusicology, linguistics, philology, folklore, religion, history, geopolitics). In particular, starting from 2020, the series has expanded and enriched its field of investigation, dedicating a line of publication to the themes of art history and architecture concerning the Christian Near East and in particular the area of Subcaucasia, term with which means the territory of historical Armenia, and the regions of the southern Caucasus up to Anatolia, Iran and upper Mesopotamia. The initiative is the result of the collaboration between the Department of Philosophy and Cultural Heritage (chair of Medieval Art History) and the Department of Asian and Mediterranean African Studies (chair of Armenian Language and Literature) as part of the Seminars of Armenian Art and the Christian East.
Permalink doi.org | e-ISSN 2610-9433 | ISSN 2610-8879 | Language en, fr, it, ru | ANCE E226147
Copyright This is an open-access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction is permitted, provided that the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. The license allows for commercial use. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
Latest published volume
The present volume is based on the Third Meeting of Italian Turcologists held in Venice in 2022, and is dedicated to the Turcologist Giampiero Bellingeri. The topics revolve around Bellingeri’s research interests, in particular the contact between the Ottoman-Turkish world and Europe, involving various disciplines, such as literary studies, history, linguistics, sociology, and art history. In addition to a contribution by professor Bellingeri himself, the volume contains thirteen chapters written by friends, colleagues and pupils, which explore various historical periods, from the fifteenth century to the present day, in which the multiple intercultural exchanges that characterise the rich relationship between Europe and the ‘Orients’ took place.
L’arte armena e oltre. Nuovi contributi
July 28, 2023
Armenia, Caucaso e Asia Centrale
April 26, 2023
Armenia, Caucasus and Central Asia
Dec. 21, 2021
Armenian Journey
July 12, 2021
Armenian Art. Critical History and New Perspectives
Dec. 21, 2020
Armenia, Caucasus and Central Asia
Oct. 22, 2020
Ukraine in Search of an Equilibrium
Dec. 16, 2019
Monitoring Central Asia and the Caspian Area
Dec. 16, 2019
Armenia, Caucasus, and Central Asia
Oct. 17, 2019
Armenia, Caucasus, and Central Asia
Nov. 15, 2018
The Deccan Architecture between the Fourteenth and Sixteenth Century
April 6, 2018
The New Day of the Empire
Dec. 20, 2017
Crimea between Russia, Italy and the Ottoman Empire
Dec. 12, 2017
Armenia, Caucasus and Central Asia
Feb. 19, 2018
Armenia, Caucasus and Central Asia
Oct. 31, 2016
Borders
Aug. 3, 2016
«A mari usque ad mare»
July 19, 2016
Ca’ Foscari, Venice and the Balkans
Nov. 2, 2015
From the Paleolithic to the Armenian genocide
March 2, 2015
At the Crossroads of Civilizations
April 30, 2014
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Ethical Code of Eurasiatica. Quaderni di studi su Balcani, Anatolia, Iran, Caucaso e Asia Centrale
Eurasiatica. Quaderni di studi su Balcani, Anatolia, Iran, Caucaso e Asia Centrale is a peer-reviewed scientific book series whose policy is inspired by the COPE (Committee on Publication Ethics) Ethical Code.
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The Editor-in-Chief and the Advisory Board of Eurasiatica alone are responsible for the decision to publish the submitted works.
Submitted works, after having been checked for plagiarism by means of the anti-plagiarism software Compilatio that is used by the University and is made available to us, will be sent to at least two reviewers. Final acceptance presumes the implementation of possible amendments, as required by the reviewers and under the supervision of the Eurasiatica Editor-in-Chief.
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If the Eurasiatica Editor-in-Chief and Advisory Board notice (or receive notifications of) mistakes or inaccuracies, conflict of interest or plagiarism in a published book, they will immediately warn the Author and the Publisher and will undertake the necessary actions to resolve the issue. They will do their best to correct the published content whenever they are informed that it contains scientific errors or that the authors have committed unethical or illegal acts in connection with their published work. If necessary, they will withdraw the book or publish a recantation.
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Authors’ responsibilities
Stylesheet
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Authors must explicitly state that their work is original in all its parts and that the submitted paper has not been previously published, nor submitted to other publishers, until the entire evaluation process is completed. Since no paper or book gets published without significant revision, earlier dissemination in conference proceedings or working papers does not preclude consideration for publication, but Authors are expected to fully disclose publication/dissemination of the material in other closely related publications, so that the overlap can be evaluated by the Eurasiatica Editor-in-Chief.
Authorship
Authors are strongly encouraged to use their ORCID iD when submitting a manuscript. This will ensure the authors’ visibility and correct citation of their work.
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Authors, under their own responsibility, must avoid any conflict of interest affecting the results obtained or the interpretations suggested. The Eurasiatica Editor-in-Chief will give serious and careful consideration to suggestions of cases in which, due to possible conflict of interest, an Author’s work should not be reviewed by a specific scholar. Authors should indicate any financing agency or the project the book stems from.
Quotations
Authors must see to it that all works consulted be properly quoted. If works or words of others are used, they have to be properly paraphrased or duly quoted. Quotations between “double quotes” (or «angled quotation marks» if the text is written in a language other than English) must reproduce the exact wording of the source; under their own responsibility, Authors should carefully refrain from disguising a restyling of the source’s wording, as though it was the original formulation.
Any form of excessive, inappropriate or unnecessary self-citation, as well as any other form of citation manipulation, are strongly discouraged.
Ethical Committee
Whenever required, the research protocols must be authorised in advance by the Ethical Committee of Ca’ Foscari University of Venice.
Emendations
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Reviewers’ responsibilities
Goal
By means of the peer-review procedure, reviewers assist the Eurasiatica Editor-in-Chief and Advisory Board in taking decisions on the submitted works. They are expected to offer the Authors suggestions as to possible adjustments aimed at improving their contribution submission.
Timing and conflicts of interest
If a reviewer does not feel up to the task of doing a given review, or if she/he is unable to read the work within the agreed schedule, she/he should notify the Eurasiatica Editor-in-Chief. Reviewers must not accept texts for which there is a conflict of interest due to previous contributions or to a competition with a disclosed author (or with an author they believe to have identified).
Confidentiality
The content of the reviewed work must be considered confidential and must not be used without explicit authorisation by the Author, who is to be contacted via the editor-in-chief. Any confidential information obtained during the peer review process should not be used for other purposes.
Collaborative attitude
Reviewers should see themselves not as adversaries but as advocates for the field. Any comment must be done in a collaborative way and from an objective point of view. Reviewers should clearly motivate their comments and keep in mind the Golden Rule of Reviewing: “Review for others as you would have others review for you”.
Plagiarism
Reviewers should report any similarity or overlapping of the work under analysis with other works known to them.
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