ISSN: 1450-9687 (print edition)                               ISSN: 2217-9461 (online edition)

 

Author Guidelines

All Infotheca articles are published both in English and Serbian in the same issue. Authors should submit their articles in one of the languages; only after the notification of acceptance the translated article is expected (for Serbian authors; for all other authors translation from English to Serbian is provided by the journal). Except the printed edition, all articles are also published in the online edition in open access.

PAPER CATEGORIZATION

For documents accepted for publishing which are subject to review, the following categorization in the Journal applies:

  1. Scientific papers:

    • Original scientific paper (containing previously unpublished results of authors’ own research acquired using a scientific method);

    • Review paper (containing original, detailed and critical review of a research problem or a field in which authors’ contribution can be demonstrated by self citation);

    • Preliminary communication (original scientific work in progress, shorter than a regular scientific paper);

    • Disquisition and reviews on a certain topic based on scientific argumentation.

  2. Scientific articles presenting experiences useful for advancement of professional practice.

  3. Informative articles can be:

    • Introductory notes and commentaries;

    • Book reviews, reviews of computer programs, data bases, standards etc.

    • Scientific event, jubilees.

Papers classified as scientific must receive at least two positive reviews. The opinions of the Editorial Committee do not have to correspond to those expressed in the published papers. Papers cannot be reprinted nor published under a similar title or in a changed form.

ELEMENTS OF MANUSCRIPTS

For scientific or professional papers the following data should be provided:

  1. Papers should not normally exceed 15 A4 pages, Times New Roman 12pt. For longer articles the authors should contact the journal editors.
  2. Names and surnames of all authors should be written in the sequence in which they will appear in a published paper.
  3. After each author’s full name, without titles and degrees, an e-mail address should be specified as well as the full and official name of his or her affiliation. (For large organizations full hierarchy of names should be specified, top down).
  4. The submission date should be provided.
  5. The authors should suggest the category of their paper but the Editor-in-Chief is responsible for the final categorization.
  6. An informative abstract NOT NORMALLY EXCEEDING 200 WORDS that concisely outlines the substance of the paper, presents the goal of the work and applied methods and states its principal conclusion, should accompany the paper. The abstract should be supplied in both languages used for publication. In the abstract, authors should use the terms that, being standard, are often used for indexing and information retrieval.
  7. Authors should supply at least 3 but not more than 10 keywords separated by commas that designate main concepts presented in the paper. The list of keywords should be supplied in both languages used for publication.
  8. If paper derives from a Master’s thesis or Doctoral dissertation authors should give the title of the thesis or dissertation, as well as a date of its submission and names of responsible institutions.
  9. If the paper presents the results of authors’ participation in some project or program, authors should acknowledge the institution that financed the project in a special section “Acknowledgment” at the end of the article, before the “Reference” section. The same section should contain acknowledgment to individuals who helped in the production of the paper.
  10. If the paper was presented at a Conference but not published in its Proceedings, this should also be stated in a separate note.
  11. Authors can use footnotes, while endnotes are prohibited; however, too long footnotes should be avoided. Authors can add appendices to their paper.
  12. The referenced material should be listed in the section “References” at the end of the paper. In the reference list authors should include all information necessary for locating the referenced work.All items referenced in the text should be listed here; nothing that was not referenced in the text should appear in this section.

EDITING CONVENTIONS FOR ACCEPTED PAPERS

  1. Papers should be prepared and submitted using LaTeX. Authors that are not familiar with LaTeX can prepare their papers using Word, as .doc, .docx, .rtf or .txt documents. These authors should not use any special formatting - the final formatting and transformation to LaTeX will be done by the Infotheca team.
  2. The papers written in Serbian should use CYRILLIC alphabet because they will be printed in that script. The only exceptions are those parts of the text for which the use of the other script, such as Latin, is more appropriate. All scripts should be represented using Unicode encoding, UTF-8 representation.
  3. Title of the paper should not be written in capital letters. The authors should keep the length of titles reasonable – preferably less than 100 characters. For titles authors should provide a shorter title that will be used for page headers.
  4. Italic type may be used to emphasize words in running text, while bold type or italic bold type can be used if necessary. Underlined text should be avoided. Please do not highlight whole sentences or paragraphs.
  5. Paper can be devided in sections and subsections, but more than two levels of the section headings should be avoided. All sections and subsections will appropriately numbered. Appendices, if any, should come at the end of the paper and they will also be appropriately labeled. If using lists, do not use more than two levels of nesting.
  6. All paragraphs should be separated by one empty line (one Enter).
  7. Authors should avoid too wide tables keeping in mind that the journal is published on A5 paper and. All tables, illustrations, diagrams and photographs should not be wider than 72.5 mm (the with of one column) or (exceptionally) 150 mm (the with of the page). All illustrations should be prepared in some lossless format, for instance .png, .tif or .jpg and their resolution should be at least 3The authors are kindly requested to add (if possible) the link to the screen from which a screenshot was taken. When taking a screen shot of a part 
  8. The authors are kindly requested to add (if possible) the link to the screen from which a screenshot was taken. When taking a screen shot of a part of some screen, authors are advised to use the Zoom possibility of the browser or other program. For diagrams that are produced with Excel, please provide the original .xls document.
  9. All tables, illustrations, diagrams and photographs should be prepared as separate files, both in black-and-white for printing and in color for the on-line version. Captions that should be below tables, illustrations, diagrams or photographs should remain in the text. Each file should have the same name as the file containing the main text, followed by the type of material to which the ordinal number in the text is added. For instance, the file containing the fourth figure of the paper “Example” should be named Example_figure_4.
  10. Please add additional document(s) that explain some specific aspects of formatting required for your paper, for instance, formulas prepared in LaTeX in a .pdf format.
  11. URL addresses that appear in the paper should be placed in footnotes; the date when the site was visited should be given.

REFERENCES AND CITATION

  1. Referenced material should be listed at the end of the text, within the unnumbered section References. The reference section should be complete; references should not be omitted. This section should not contain any bibliographic information not referenced in the main text. Referenced items should not be mentioned in footnotes.
  2. Entries in the reference list should be ordered alphabetically by authors or editors names, or publishing organizations (when no authors are identified). If this list contains several entries by the same authors, these entries should be ordered chronologically.
  3. For preparation of a reference list use Chicago Manual of Style reference list entry (www.chicagomanualofstyle.org).
  4. Full names of journals, and not their short titles or acronyms, should be specified. Use the 10-point type for entries in the reference list.
  5. All authors, whether they prepare their articles using LaTeX or Word, will prepare all the items from their References section using BibTeX templates that are given for all the examples at the Infotheca web site (http://infoteka.bg.ac.rs/index.php/en/upu-s-v-z-u-r)

Citation examples include:

  1. Bibliography
  2. Citation in text
  3. BibTeX format

Note:

Listing of authors is unique in all types of publications.

Examples of the most diverse listing of authors (one author, two or more authors, the corporatebody asauthor ...) can be found in the examples for citing monographs.

Book (by one author)

  1. Last name, First name. Title of Book. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication.

    Mulligan, William. The Great War for peace. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2014.

  2. (Mulligan 2014)
  3. @Book{Mulligan2014,
    title = {The Great War for peace},
    publisher = {Yale University Press},
    year = {2014},
    author = {William Mulligan},
    address = {New Haven},
    }

Book (two or three authors)

  1. Last name, First name and First name Last name. Title of Book. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication.

    Milanović, Predrag D. and Dorin Lelea. Fouling and Corrosion of the Geothermal Water Heating Systems: monograph. Belgrade: IHTM - Institute of Chemistry, Technology and Metallurgy, 2013.

  2. (Milanović et al. 2013)
  3. @Book{Milanovic2013,
    title = {Fouling and Corrosion of the Geothermal Water Heating Systems: monograph},
    publisher = {IHTM - Institute of Chemistry, Technology and Metallurgy},
    year = {2013},
    author = {Predrag D. Milanović and Dorin Lelea},
    address = {Belgrade},
    }

Book (for four or more authors)

  1. Last name, First name, First name Last name, First name Last name, First name Last name, and First name Last name. Title of Book. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication.

    Tomić, Danilo, Zoran Njegovan, Miladin Ševarlić, Milivoj Gajić, Stanislav Zekić, Jovana Čikić, and Živojin Petrović. Agri-food Sector in Serbia: state and challenges: monograph. Belgrade: Serbian Association of Agricultural Economics, 2013.

  2. (Tomić et al. 2013)
  3. @Book{TomicEtAl2013,
    Title = {Agri-food Sector in Serbia: state and challenges: monograph},
    publisher = {Serbian Association of Agricultural Economics},
    year = {2013},
    author = {Danilo Tomić and Zoran Njegovan and Miladin Ševarlić and Milivoj Gajić and Stanislav Zekić and Jovana Čikić and Živojin Petrović},
    address = {Belgrade},
    }

Book (corporate body as author)

  1. Corporate Name. Title of Book. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication.

    European Max Planck Group on conflict of laws in intellectual property. Conflict of laws in intellectual property: the CLIP principles and commentary. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013.

  2. (European Max Planck Group 2013)
  3. @Book{Conflict2013,
    title = {Conflict of laws in intellectual property: the CLIP principles and commentary},
    publisher = {Oxford University Press},
    year = {2013},
    author = {European Max Planck Group on conflict of laws in intellectual property},
    address = {Oxford},
    }

Book (multi-volume publication)

  1. Last name, First name. Title of Book, part of the book, title of the book part. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication.

    Hütler, Michael. Ottoman Empire and European theatre, 1, The age of Mozart and Selim III. Wien: Hollitzer, 2013.

  2. (Hütler 2013)
  3. @Book{Hutler2013,
    title = {Ottoman Empire and European theatre, 1, The age of Mozart and Selim III},
    publisher = {Hollitzer},
    year = {2013},
    author = {Michael Hütler},
    address = {Wien},
    }

Book (anonymous works-unknown authorship)

  1. Title of Book. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication.

    Improving international investment agreements. London: Routledge, 2013.

  2. (Improving… 2013)
  3. @Book{Improving2013,
    title = {Improving international investment agreements},
    publisher = {Routledge},
    year = {2013},
    address = {London},
    }

Book (Editor, translator, or compiler instead of author)

  1. Last name, First name, ed. Title of Book. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication.

    Savić, Vera, ed.  Integrating Culture and Language Teaching in TEYL. Jagodina: Faculty of Education, 2013.

  2. (Savić 2013)
  3. @Book{Savic2013,
    title = {Integrating Culture and Language Teaching in TEYL},
    publisher = {Faculty of Education},
    year = {2013},
    editor = {Vera Savić, ed.},
    address = {Jagodina},
    }

Chapter or other part of a book

  1. Last name, First name. “Title of the chapter“. In Title of Book ed. First name Last name, page/s. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication.

    Vitas, Duško and Cvetana Krstev. “Intex and Slavonic morphology“. In INTEX pour la linguistique et le traitement automatique des langues, éd.Claude Muller, Jean Royauté et Max Silberztein, 19-33. Besançon: Presses universitaires de Franche-Comté, 2004.

  2. (Vitas et al. 2004)
  3. @InBook{VitasKrstev2004,
    chapter = {Intex and Slavonic morphology},
    pages = {19-33},
    title = {INTEX pour la linguistique et le traitement automatique des langues},
    publisher = {Presses universitaires de Franche-Comté},
    year = {2004},
    author = {Duško Vitas and Cvetana Krstev},
    editor = {Claude Muller and Jean Royauté and Max Silberztein},
    address = {Besançon},
    }

Chapter of an edited volume (in multi-volume publication)

  1. Last name, First name. “Title of the chapter“. In Title of Book, ed.First name Last name, part of the book, Title of the book part, ed.First name Last name, page/s. Place of  publication: Publisher, Year of publication.

    Brisson, Roger. “21st century digital humanities: researching and writing a web-based dissertation in the history of science“. In Digitalizacija kulturne i naučne baštine,univerzitetski  repozitorijumi i učenje na daljinu : tematski zbornik u 4 knjige, gl. i odg. ur. Aleksandra Vraneš, knj. 3, Digitalni izvori u društveno-humanističkim istraživanjima, urednici Aleksandra Vraneš, Ljiljana Marković, Gven Aleksander, 23-45. Beograd: Filološki fakultet Univerziteta, 2012.

  2. (Brisson 2012)
  3. @InCollection{Brisson2012,
    author = {Roger Brisson},
    title = {21st century digital humanities: researching and writing a web-based dissertation in the history of science},
    booktitle = {Digitalni izvori u društveno-humanističkim istraživanjima},
    publisher = {Filološki fakultet Univerziteta},
    year = {2012},
    editor = {Aleksandra Vraneš and Ljiljana Marković and Gven Aleksander},
    volume = {knj. 3},
    series = {Digitalizacija kulturne i naučne baštine,univerzitetski repozitorijumi i učenje na daljinu : tematski zbornik u 4 knjige},
    pages = {23-45},
    address = {Beograd},

    }

Electronic Books and Books Consulted Online

  1. Last name, First name. Title of Book. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication. http://adress.

    Herrmann, Albert. The Taymouth Castle manuscript of Sir Gilbert Hay's "Buik of King Alexander the Conquerour". Berlin : R. Gaertners Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1898. http://phaidrabg.bg.ac.rs/o:690.

  2. (Herrmann 1898)
  3. @Book{Herrmann1898,
    title = {The Taymouth Castle manuscript of Sir Gilbert Hay's "Buik of King Alexander the Conquerour"},
    publisher = {R. Gaertners Verlagsbuchhandlung},
    year = {1898},
    author = {Albert Herrmann},
    address = {Berlin},
    note = {\url {http://phaidrabg.bg.ac.rs/o:690}},
    }

Note

If a book is available in more than one format, cite the version you consulted. For books consulted online, list a URL; include an access date only if one is required by your publisher or discipline. If no fixed page numbers are available, you can include a section title or a chapter or other number.

Articles

In a note, list the specific page numbers consulted, if any. In the bibliography, list the page range for the whole article.

Article (in a print journal)

  1. Last name, First name and First name Last name. “Article Title“.Journal Title vol., issue (year): page/s.

    Mila Dragojević and Andy Konitzer. “The forensics of patronage“. Sociološki pregled vol. 47, no. 1 (2013): 3-22.

  2. (Dragojević et al. 2013)
  3. @Article{Dragojevic2013,
    author = {Mila Dragojević and Andy Konitzer},
    title = {The forensics of patronage},
    journal = {Sociološki pregled},
    year = {2013},
    volume = {47},
    number = {1},
    pages = {3-22},
    }

Article in an online journal

  1. Last name, First name. “Article Title“.Journal Title vol., issue (year): page/s. access date.http://adress.DOI.

    Petrović, Slavica P. “Pluralism in structuring the management problem situations“. Teme vol. 36, no. 2 (2012): 797-814. Accessed February 28, 2013, http://teme.junis.ni.ac.rs/teme2-2012/teme%202-2012-22.pdf.

  2. (Petrović 2013)
  3. @Article{Petrovic2012,
    author = {Slavica P. Petrović},
    title = {Pluralism in structuring the management problem situations},
    journal = {Teme},
    year = {2012},
    volume = {36},
    number = {2},
    pages = {797-814},
    note = {Accessed February 28, 2013, \url {http://teme.junis.ni.ac.rs/teme2-2012/teme%202-2012-22.pdf}},
    }

Article in a newspaper or popular magazine

  1. Last name, First name. “Article Title“.Newspaper Title, publishing date, page/s. Access date.http://adress.

    Stolberg, Sheryl Gay, and Robert Pear. “Wary Centrists Posing Challenge in Health Care Vote.” New York Times, February 27, 2010. Accessed February 28, 2010. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/28/us/politics/28health.html.

  2. (Stolberg et al. 2010)
  3. @Article{Stolberg2010,
    author = {Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Robert Pear},
    title = {Wary Centrists Posing Challenge in Health Care Vote},
    journal = {New York Times},
    year = {February 27, 2010},
    note = {Accessed February 28, 2010. \url {http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/28/us/politics/28health.html}},
    }

Note

Newspaper and magazine articles may be cited in running text instead of in a note, and they are commonly omitted from a bibliography. The previous examples show the more formal versions of the citations. If you consulted an article online, include a URL; include an access date only if your publisher or discipline requires one.

Book review

  1. Last name, First name. “ReviewTitle“. Review of Book Title, by author’s First name Last name. Journal Title vol., issue (year): page/s. Access date. http://adress, DOI

    Kamp, David. “Deconstructing Dinner.” Review of The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals, by Michael Pollan. New York Times, April 23, 2006, Sunday Book Review. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/23/books/review/23kamp.html.

  2. (Kamp 2006)
  3. @Article{Kamp2006,
    author = {David Kamp},
    title = {“Deconstructing Dinner.” Review of The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals, by Michael Pollan},
    journal = {New York Times},
    year = {April 23, 2006},
    note = {\url {http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/23/books/review/23kamp.html}},
    }

Thesis or dissertation

  1. Last name,First name. “Title of thesis or dissertation“. Thesis/dissertation, Faculty name, year.

    Guo, Yi. “Chinapolitik der Bundesrepublik Deutschland von 1998 bis 2009“. PhD diss., Berlin Freie Universität, 2012.

  2. (Guo 2012)
  3. @PhdThesis{Guo2012,
    author = {Yi Guo},
    title = {Chinapolitik der Bundesrepublik Deutschland von 1998 bis 2009},
    school = {Berlin Freie Universität},
    year = {2012},
    type = {phdthesis},
    }

Paper presented at a meeting or conference

  1. Last name, First name.“Title of paper“. Paper presented at the Name of the meeting/conference, City, State, date, year.

    Trtovac, Aleksandra and Nataša Dakić. “Bringing historical advertisments and commercials into research focus : Europeana Newspapers project“. Paper presented at theEighth SEEDI Conference on Digitisation of Cultural and Scientific Heritage, National and University Library, Zagreb, 15-16 May 2013.

  2. (Trtovac et al. 2013)
  3. @Unpublished{TrtovacDakic2013,
    author = {Aleksandra Trtovac and Nataša Dakić},
    title = {Bringing historical advertisments and commercials into research focus : Europeana Newspapers project},
    note = {Paper presented at theEighth SEEDI Conference on Digitisation of Cultural and Scientific Heritage, National and University Library, Zagreb, 15-16 May 2013.},
    }

Website

A citation to website content can often be limited to a mention in the text or in a note.If a more formal citation is desired, it may be styled as in the example. Because such content is subject to change, include an access date or, if available, a date whenthe site was last modified.

 

Possible model:

  1. Last name, First name. “Title of Web Page.” Publishing Organization or Name of Website in Italics. Publication date and/or access date if available. URL.

    “Guidelines for doctoral dissertation “. Belgrade University University library "Svetozar Markovic". Accessed February 28, 2014. http://www.ubsm.rs/projekti/doktorati/index.php.

  2. (Guidelines for doctoral dissertations 2014)
  3. @Misc{Guidelines2014,
    title = {Guidelines for doctoral dissertation},
    howpublished = {Belgrade University University library "Svetozar Markovic"},
    note = {Accessed February 28, 2014. \url {http://www.ubsm.rs/projekti/doktorati/index.php}},
    }