Deadline for Abstract Submission (5 August 2022) and Paper Submission(5 September 2022) Submissions of papers (no more than ONE papers per author) are invited in any topic of the conference theme directly in the form of an MS Word file via our online submission portal and if you have any question and/or need help please contact the conference international coordinator Ms Janet Snow (janet.snow@wasd.org.uk). All papers submitted for presentation in the conference and publication in WASD Conference Proceedings (Outlook) are refereed through a double blind process. WASD Proceeding is a high quality publication that has been published by WASD since 2003 in partnership with various publishers. The conference proceedings are listed in the Thomson Reuters Conference Proceedings Citation Index (CPCI), and respected all over the world by leading academic and professional bodies such as the United Nations, World Bank, UNESCO, European Commission and major universities in the UK (Oxford, Cambridge, London), USA (Harvard, Princeton, Stanford, NY, California) and Australia (Queensland, Sydney, Griffith). Your abstract must include the following components: In order to have your abstract evaluated quickly and to ensure publication, you are required to follow WASD’s abstract submission guidelines carefully. The guidelines are designed to help you provide the most useful information about your paper. Abstracts that do not follow the WASD format will NOT be accepted.
If you are not included in WASD website (network) already, you need to upload your details first before submitting your abstract. We have found using a restricted WhatsApp group for the conference is extremely useful for logistical information regarding the progress of the conference, so please send us your mobile umber to include you in the conference WhatsApp group. Abstracts should contain no more than 150 words. Write concisely and clearly. The abstract should reflect only what will appear in the full paper. Title: Provide a simple and short title of your paper clearly describing your paper. Name and address: Names of author(s) and complete addresses with email address of each author. Biographical notes: Author(s) must provide a biographical note (one paragraph and not CV) of no more than 100 words for each author. Abstract approximately 100 words, maximum 150. Write concisely and clearly. The abstract should reflect only what appears in the original paper. To produce a structured abstract, please complete the following fields about the paper using this template. There are four fields which are obligatory (purpose, design/methodology/approach, findings and originality/value); the other three (research limitations/implications, practical implications, and social implications) may be omitted if they are not applicable to your paper.
- Purpose: What are the reason(s) for writing the paper or the aims of the research?
- Design/methodology/approach: How are the objectives achieved? Include the main method(s) used for the research. What is the approach to the topic and what is the theoretical or subject scope of the paper?
- Findings: What was found in the course of the work? This will refer to analysis, discussion, or results.
- Research limitations/implications (if applicable): If research is reported on in the paper this section must be completed and should include suggestions for future research and any identified limitations in the research process.
- Practical implications (if applicable): What outcomes and implications for practice, applications and consequences are identified? How will the research impact upon the business or enterprise? What changes to practice should be made as a result of this research? What is the commercial or economic impact? Not all papers will have practical implications.
- Social implications (if applicable): What will be the impact on society of this research? How will it influence public attitudes? How will it influence (corporate) social responsibility or environmental issues? How could it inform public or industry policy? How might it affect quality of life? Not all papers will have social implications.
- Originality/value: What is new in the paper? State the value of the paper and to whom.
Keywords: Using keywords is a vital part of abstract writing, because of the practice of retrieving information electronically:
- Supply approximately 6-10 words or phrases which will be used for tagging the paper in WASD’s database. Keywords act as the search term.
- Use keywords that are specific, and that reflect what is essential about the paper.
- Put yourself in the position of someone researching in your field: what would you look for? Consider also whether you can use any of the current “buzzwords”.
- Researchers will be more likely to retrieve the paper when conducting a keyword search of our database if the paper is suitably tagged.
- Pick keywords that reflect the specificity of the paper. Avoid overarching terms like “Management” unless the paper discusses the topic with such a wide focus. Use the most common term for a concept. Do not make up new terms for an old concept.
- Try to think broadly: if the paper discusses performance appraisal in an electronics factory it may be worthwhile supplying the industry as a keyword. If an activity/research takes place in a particular country then supply the country’s name as a keyword.
Guidelines To ensure that the typescripts are published with the minimum of delay it is essential that much greater care than usual be taken with the typing and authors are strongly advised to obtain the help of a suitable colleague (if necessary) to ensure that the typescript is clear and grammatically correct. In order to achieve rapid publication, the texts will be printed directly from authors’ typescripts. Authors are therefore fully responsible for the quality of their article and are kindly requested to observe the following instructions for the preparation of their typescripts. You can browse sample papers from our previous conference here. Types of Papers: The following types of papers are sought:
- Conceptual (laying out the landscape, defining needs, proposing approaches and solutions, etc.). Papers are likely to be discursive and will cover philosophical discussions and comparative studies of others’ work and thinking.
- Literature Review (papers cite any relevant literature). Main purpose of the paper is to annotate and/or critique the literature in a particular subject area.
- Review (industries, systems, methodologies, research, national differences, industrial differences, cultural differences, etc.). Papers provide an overview or historical examination of some concept, technique or phenomena. Papers are likely to be more descriptive or instructional (“how to” chapters) than discursive.
- Case Studies (empirical work, industry cases, test cases, pilot studies, etc.) are particularly welcome. Case studies describe actual interventions or experiences within organizations. They may well be subjective and will not generally report on research. A description of a legal case or a hypothetical case study used as a teaching exercise would also fit into this category.
- Research (report on any type of research undertaken by the author(s). The research may involve the construction or testing of a model or framework, action research, testing of data, market research or surveys, empirical, scientific or clinical research.
- Viewpoint (where content is dependent on the author’s opinion and interpretation, also includes journalistic pieces)
- Technical (describes and evaluates technical products, processes or services)
Typescript Preparation: All authors must provide the following information:
- Papers must be no more than ten A4 pages in length.
- Full name; position; department; institution; full postal address including email and approximately 50 words biographical notes per author, maximum 100 and a recent photo.
- Title as short as possible.
- References to successful applications within industry is preferable but not a must.
- Papers may be updates of other material previously written but must be original to the author and, once accepted for publication, cannot appear in any other periodical.
- Papers must be single-spaced and should be indented by 5 mm.
- Papers must be submitted online before the deadline in A4 size Word format, not PDF format.
- Please ensure that your paper is virus free!
- Text should be left and right justified, providing a vertical margin on both sides and please use Times New Roman only in the entire article (size 12).
- Once the manuscript is complete, we recommend you run a spell-check program and please have your final draft read by at least two other persons before supplying it for publication.
- File name would be your first and last name and in case of more than one author just the first one, for example, JOHNADAMS.
- Please note that Full responsibility for the paper rests with the author. You must take the necessary steps to obtain permission to use any material that may be protected by copyright.
- Observe and stick to the deadline for sending in your manuscript.
- Figures in the final accepted manuscript must be included in the electronic text file and NOT provided as separate files.
- All papers must be written in UK English. If English is not your first language, please ask an English-speaking colleague to proofread your paper.
Style:
- Papers must get to the point early and succinctly and not sound like an advertorial for a country or a company.
- Blatantly promotional material will not be published.
- Keep paragraphs short and sentences short and uncomplicated.
- Authors must write in the active voice and, where possible, avoid technical jargon.
- Acronyms should be translated in full into English. Bear in mind that many of the readers do not have English as their first language.
- It should not be assumed that the reader is familiar with specific national institutions or corporations.
- Authors are encouraged to approach their chosen topic with an international perspective.
- Countries and groupings of countries should be referred to by their full title (for example, ‘China’, ‘Europe’ and ‘America’ are all ambiguous).
- Special attention should be paid to identifying units of currency by nationality.
References: Use the Harvard (name and date) short reference system for citations in the text with a detailed alphabetical list at the end of the paper. For example ‘Hamel (2000) suggests …’ or ‘Nonaka and Takeuchi (1995) found that …’ or ‘A study of economic change (Nelson and Winter, 1982) has shown that …’
- Footnotes should be avoided, but any short, succinct notes making a specific point, may be placed in number order following the alphabetical list of references.
- References should be made only to works that are published, accepted for publication (not merely ‘submitted’), or available through libraries or institutions. Any other source should be qualified by a note regarding availability.
- Full reference should include all authors’ names and initials, date of publication, title of paper, title of publication (italics), volume and issue number (of a journal), publisher and form (books, conference proceedings), page numbers.
Figures:
- All illustrations, whether diagrams or photographs, are referred to as Figures.
- They should be black and white, not colour, and numbered sequentially.
- Please place them at the end of the paper, rather than interspersed in text.
- Originals of line diagrams will be reduced and used directly, so please prepare them to the highest possible standards.
- Bear in mind that lettering may be reduced in size by a factor of 2 or 3, and that fine lines may disappear. Electronic copies of the figures are also required.
Translated Works:
- Difficulties often arise in translating acronyms, so it is best to spell out an acronym in English (for example, IIRP – French personal income tax).
- Similarly, labels and suffixes need careful attention where the letters refer to words which have been translated.
- The names of mathematical functions may change in translation – check against an English or American mathematical reference text.
Units of Measurement: Please follow the International System for units of measurement in your paper. Imperial units will be converted, except where conversion would affect the meaning of a statement, or imply a greater or lesser degree of accuracy. Checklist: Submission Preparation Checklist (all items required)
- The text meets the formatting requirements outlined above.
- The submission file is in Microsoft Word document file format.