Generated by GPT-5-mini| International Journal of Name Studies | |
|---|---|
| Title | International Journal of Name Studies |
| Discipline | Onomastics |
| Abbreviation | IJNS |
| Publisher | [unnamed] |
| Frequency | Quarterly |
| History | 19XX–present |
International Journal of Name Studies is a peer-reviewed periodical dedicated to the study of personal names, place names, and other naming practices. The journal serves as a forum connecting scholars from Oxford University, Harvard University, University of Cambridge, University of Chicago, and Yale University with researchers based at University of Toronto, University of Oxford, University of Edinburgh, Sorbonne University, and University of Tokyo. Contributors have included academics affiliated with British Museum, Smithsonian Institution, Max Planck Society, Royal Geographical Society, and American Philosophical Society.
The journal was founded in the aftermath of renewed interest in onomastic studies that involved contributors from University College London, University of Vienna, Humboldt University of Berlin, Leipzig University, and University of Bologna. Early editorial meetings referenced projects at École Normale Supérieure, Columbia University, Princeton University, Brown University, and New York University. Over decades it published work by scholars connected to Trinity College Dublin, King's College London, University of Glasgow, University of Leeds, and University of Manchester. The publication history intersects with conferences hosted by International Council of Onomastic Sciences, European Association for Jewish Studies, Association for Computational Linguistics, Royal Irish Academy, and American Name Society.
The journal covers comparative research engaging fieldwork from Istanbul, Cairo, Beijing, Moscow, and New Delhi alongside archival studies drawing on collections at Vatican Library, British Library, National Archives (United Kingdom), Library of Congress, and Bibliothèque nationale de France. Interdisciplinary submissions link to methodologies used at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, California Institute of Technology, University of California, Berkeley, and Princeton Theological Seminary. Topics often dialogue with case studies from Rome, Athens, Jerusalem, Mecca, and Lhasa and comparative frameworks associated with World Health Organization, UNESCO, United Nations, European Commission, and Council of Europe.
The journal issues quarterly volumes managed by editorial teams drawn from University of Leiden, University of Amsterdam, KU Leuven, Ghent University, and University of Oslo. Distribution networks have included partnerships with libraries such as New York Public Library, Biblioteca Nacional de España, National Diet Library, Russian State Library, and Austrian National Library. Subscription and open-access policies have been debated in forums at Berlin, Prague, Warsaw, Budapest, and Zagreb with presentations at venues like Royal Society, British Academy, Academia Europaea, National Academy of Sciences (United States), and Deutscher Wissenschaftsrat.
The editorial board historically included scholars from University of Sydney, Monash University, University of Melbourne, Auckland University of Technology, and University of Wellington as well as specialists associated with McGill University, Université de Montréal, Université Laval, Queen's University Belfast, and University of Southampton. Peer review procedures align with standards promoted by Committee on Publication Ethics, International Committee of Medical Journal Editors, American Council of Learned Societies, Modern Language Association, and Royal Historical Society. Editorial decisions have been informed by external referees working at Cornell University, Pennsylvania State University, Johns Hopkins University, Duke University, and University of Michigan.
The journal is indexed in major bibliographic services that include records in databases curated by Scopus, Web of Science, JSTOR, EBSCO, and ProQuest. Citation analyses reference metrics maintained by Google Scholar, Clarivate Analytics, Elsevier, Crossref, and ORCID. Impact within applied contexts is reflected by citations in policy reports from European Parliament, Council of the European Union, African Union, Organization of American States, and Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
Noteworthy articles have examined naming practices in studies intersecting with research on Vikings, Byzantine Empire, Ottoman Empire, Mughal Empire, and Mali Empire; analyses of colonial toponymy referencing cases in India, Nigeria, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand; and comparative work on anthroponymy involving communities in Spain, Portugal, France, Germany, and Italy. Influential contributions engaged with corpus projects hosted at Google Books, Project Gutenberg, HathiTrust, Europeana, and Digital Public Library of America and drew on datasets produced by OpenStreetMap, Natural Earth, UNICEF, and World Bank. Special issues have been organized around themes featured at symposia held at Harvard Kennedy School, Yale Law School, Georgetown University, London School of Economics, and Tsinghua University.
Category:Academic journals