Journal of Anthropological Research
The Journal of Anthropological Research is a quarterly peer-reviewed scientific journal covering anthropology. It was established in 1937 as the New Mexico Anthropologist, with its first issue published on March 13 of that year. At the beginning of 1945, Leslie Spier launched the journal's successor, the Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, and served as its editor until he died in 1961. The subsequent editor, Harry Basehart, changed the journal's title to its current one in 1973. It is published by the University of Chicago Press along with the journal's owner and copyright holder, the University of New Mexico. The current editor-in-chief is Lawrence Guy Straus (University of New Mexico).[1] According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2016 impact factor of 0.647, ranking it 55th out of 82 journals in the category "Anthropology".[2]
Discipline | Anthropology |
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Language | English |
Edited by | Lawrence Guy Straus |
Publication details | |
Former name(s) | New Mexico Anthropologist, Southwestern Journal of Anthropology |
History | 1937–present |
Publisher | |
Frequency | Quarterly |
0.647 (2016) | |
Standard abbreviations | |
ISO 4 | J. Anthropol. Res. |
Indexing | |
CODEN | JAPRCP |
ISSN | 0091-7710 (print) 2153-3806 (web) |
LCCN | 73645054 |
OCLC no. | 14573998 |
Links | |
References
- "Seven Decades of SWJA/JAR". University of Chicago Press. Retrieved 2017-10-29.
- "Journals Ranked by Impact: Anthropology". 2016 Journal Citation Reports. Web of Science (Science ed.). Clarivate Analytics. 2017.