Articles, submitted to Information & Security should be no longer than 20 double-spaced typewritten pages, including double-spaced endnotes (or no more than 5,000 words overall). They should be accompanied by a cover letter giving the paper’s title and the name, mailing address, e-mail address, and telephone number of the corresponding author. They should be also accompanied by an abstract of 200-300 words, a list of 5-8 keywords or phrases, and a brief statement summarizing the author’s present affiliation, publishing career, and research interests. DO NOT indicate authors’ names on manuscript pages. DO NOT reveal authors’ identity through references in the text or in any other way.
Send two copies to Dr. Todor Tagarev, Managing Editor, Information & Security, Mladost 4, POBox 16, Sofia 1715, Bulgaria. Include a diskette with all files prepared with commonly used wordprocessing software. Alternatively, you may send all computer files to infosec@procon.bg.
Number endnotes consecutively; these numbers must correspond to those in the text. Endnotes should follow The Chicago Manual of Style. Examples:
Book:
1. Carl von Clausewitz, On War, Anatol Rapoport, editor (London: Penguin Books, 1968), 164-67.
Article:
2. William Owens, “The Emerging System of Systems,” Military Review 75, 3 (May-June 1995): 15-19.
Chapter:
3. David Alberts, “The Future of Command and Control with DBK,” in Dominant Battlespace Knowledge, ed. Stuart E. Johnson and Martin C. Libicki (Washington: National Defense University, 1996), 67-88.
Conference paper:
4.
Andrew Rathmell, “Building Partnerships to Protect Europe’s
Infrastructures” (paper presented at the Information Systems Security Europe
Conference, London, September 2001), 28-43.
Internet source:
5. Ralf Bendrath, “Der Kosovo-Krieg im Cyberspace. Cracker, Infowar und Medienkrieg,” telepolis <www.iwar.org.uk/iwar/resources/kosovo.htm> (20 Oct. 2001).
(notice the date the website was accessed is included at the end of
the reference)
Subsequent shortened citations should read as follows:
1. Clausewitz, On War, 31.
2. Owens, “System of Systems,” 17.
3. Alberts, “Future of C2,” in DBK, 73.
To download detailed instructions in Word file click here.