About the Journal

Focus and Scope 

OS is a laboratory of ideas and research through which it is intended to promote the centrality of historical studies in the practices of knowledge, transmission and enhancement of production landscapes.

The Journal is expression of the National Association RESpro - Rete di storici per i paesaggi della produzione and is committed to giving voice to all researchers interested in defending and supporting the historical culture of work and places of production in all their declinations, economic and social, modern and contemporary, architecture and art, in an interdisciplinary perspective constantly open to the world of conservation, archaeology, geography and communication.

OS includes historical studies and applied research on production systems, from forestry-pastoral environments to agriculture and industry, and on rural and urban landscapes, captured in their material and immaterial dimensions and in their different economic, political, social, artistic and territorial articulations.

OS is a scientific journal published in Open Access on the platform SHARE Riviste within the Convention Universities Share, under the patronage of the Department of Architecture and Industrial Design of the University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli.

All texts published in OS will be evaluated following the double blind peer review process, by two or more readers identified within a wide international circle of specialists.

In order to contribute to forthcoming issues of the journal with essays and articles, please send an abstract of the proposal, with contact details and a brief biographical profile, to resproretedistorici@gmail.com

The proposed publication will be evaluated by the Steering Committee and the Scientific Committee.

 

Peer review

All texts published in OS. Opificio della Storia are screened in 'double blind' peer review mode, by no less than two readers selected from a broad international circle of specialists.

 

Journal Sections

Essays: OS publishes original works in Italian and in other languages (English, French and Spanish). It accepts a broad time range from the Middle Ages onwards. It welcomes theoretical contributions, historiographical debates as well as research based on case studies. It is possible to submit proposals to initiate monographic issues.

Territories at work: this is a section allocated to collecting news and reports on scientific and dissemination initiatives relating to the issues examined by OS. The material and any documentation (programs, posters) must be sent directly to the scientific committee of the journal.

The OS library: OS promotes the dissemination of scientific research results and the debate on historiographic production through editorial reviews, comments and recommendations.

 

Author Guidelines

Authors have to adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in Editorial rules, available at the following link:

Editorial rules 

 

Open Access Policy 

This journal provides immediate open access to its content on the principle that making research freely available to the public supports a greater global exchange of knowledge.

OS does not have article processing charges (APCs) nor article submission charges.

OS  is is published under a Licence Creative Commons CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.

With the licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0, authors retain the copyright, allowing anyone to download, copy and re-distribute the material in any medium format under the following terms: the user must give appropriate credit, provides a link to the license, and indicates changes were made. The user may not use the material for commercial purposes; if he/she remixes, transforms, or builds upon the material, he/she may not distribute the modified material. The work must be properly attributed to its author and OS should be mentioned. Furthermore, the author retains the publishing rights.

OS endorses the principles proposed by the Budapest Open Access Initiative (BOAI) supporting a free dissemination of scientific research. By “open access” to peer-reviewed research literature, we mean its free availability on the public internet, permitting any users to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of these articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software, or use them for any other lawful purpose, without financial, legal, or technical barriers other than those inseparable from gaining access to the internet itself. The only constraint on reproduction and distribution, and the only role for copyright in this domain, should be to give authors control over the integrity of their work and the right to be properly acknowledged and cited.

 

Publisher copyright policies & self-archiving (by RoMEO/SHERPA)

Author's Pre-print:

 author can archive pre-print (ie pre-refereeing)

Author's Post-print:

 author can archive post-print (ie final draft post-refereeing)

Publisher's Version/PDF:

 author can archive publisher's version/PDF

General Conditions:

On open access repositories

Publisher's version/PDF may be used

Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives Licence 4.0 is available

 

Publication ethics and publication malpractice 

The publication of an article in a peer-reviewed journal is an essential model for OS.

It is necessary to agree upon standards of expected ethical behavior for all parties involved in the act of publishing: the author, the journal editor, the peer reviewer and the publisher.

OS's ethic statements are based on COPE's Best Practice Guidelines for Journal Editors.

Authors, editors and referees are required to know and share the following principles.

 

Duties of Editors

Publication decisions

The editors of the OS are responsible for deciding which of the articles submitted to the journal should be published. The editors may be guided by the policies of the journal’s editorial board and constrained by such legal requirements as shall then be in force regarding libel, copyright infringement and plagiarism. The editors may confer with other editors or reviewers in making this decision.

 

Fair play

The editors at any time evaluate manuscripts for their intellectual content without regard to race, gender, sexual orientation, religious belief, ethnic origin, citizenship, or political philosophy of the authors.

 

Confidentiality

The editors and any editorial staff must not disclose any information about a submitted manuscript to anyone other than the corresponding author, reviewers, potential reviewers, other editorial advisers, and the publisher, as appropriate.

 

Disclosure and conflicts of interest

Unpublished materials disclosed in a submitted manuscript must not be used in an editor’s own research without the express written consent of the author.

 

Duties of Reviewers

Contribution to Editorial Decisions

Peer review assists the editors in making editorial decisions and through the editorial communications with the author may also assist the author in improving the paper.

 

Promptness

Any selected referee who feels unqualified to review the research reported in a manuscript or knows that its prompt review will be impossible should notify the editor and excuse himself from the review process.

 

Confidentiality

Any manuscripts received for review must be treated as confidential documents. They must not be shown to or discussed with others except as authorized by the editors.

 

Standards of Objectivity

Reviews should be conducted objectively. Personal criticism of the author is inappropriate. Referees should express their views clearly with supporting arguments.

 

Acknowledgement of Sources

Reviewers should identify relevant published work that has not been cited by the authors. Any statement that an observation, derivation, or argument had been previously reported should be accompanied by the relevant citation. A reviewer should also call to the editors attention any substantial similarity or overlap between the manuscript under consideration and any other published paper of which they have personal knowledge.

 

Disclosure and Conflict of Interest

Privileged information or ideas obtained through peer review must be kept confidential and not used for personal advantage. Reviewers should not consider manuscripts in which they have conflicts of interest resulting from competitive, collaborative, or other relationships or connections with any of the authors, companies, or institutions connected to the papers.

 

Duties of Authors

Reporting standards

Authors of reports of original research should present an accurate account of the work performed as well as an objective discussion of its significance. Underlying data should be represented accurately in the paper. A paper should contain sufficient detail and references to permit others to replicate the work. Fraudulent or knowingly inaccurate statements constitute unethical behavior and are unacceptable.

 

Data Access and Retention

If applicable, authors are asked to provide the raw data in connection with a paper for editorial review, and should be prepared to provide public access to such data, and should in any event be prepared to retain such data for a reasonable time after publication.

 

Originality and Plagiarism

The authors should ensure that they have written entirely original works, and if the authors have used the work and/or words of others, that this has been appropriately cited or quoted.

 

Multiple, Redundant or Concurrent Publication

An author should not in general publish manuscripts describing essentially the same research in more than one journal or primary publication. Submitting the same manuscript to more than one journal concurrently constitutes unethical publishing behaviour and is unacceptable.

 

Acknowledgement of Sources

Proper acknowledgment of the work of others must always be given. Authors should cite publications that have been influential in determining the nature of the reported work.

 

Authorship of the Paper

Authorship should be limited to those who have made a significant contribution to the conception, design, execution, or interpretation of the reported study. All those who have made significant contributions should be listed as co-authors. Where there are others who have participated in certain substantive aspects of the research project, they should be acknowledged or listed as contributors. The corresponding author should ensure that all appropriate co-authors and no inappropriate co-authors are included on the paper, and that all co-authors have seen and approved the final version of the paper and have agreed to its submission for publication.

 

Disclosure and Conflicts of Interest

All authors should disclose in their manuscript any financial or other substantive conflict of interest that might be construed to influence the results or interpretation of their manuscript. All sources of financial support for the project should be disclosed.

 

Errors in published articles

When an author identifies a relevant error or inaccuracy in one of his articles, he must promptly inform the co-ordinator and/or editors of the journal and provide them with all necessary information to point out the necessary corrections at the bottom of the article.

 

Anti-plagiarism measures

Authors are required to declare that they have composed an original work in its entirety and have cited all the texts used.

All articles submitted to OS are carefully checked for misuse of other texts.

When plagiarism is found, it is prosecuted as recommended in the guidelines drawn up by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) (https://publicationethics.org/search?query=resources+flowcharts&urlfield= ).

If, on the other hand, readers were to report plagiarism in an OS article, the editorial co-ordinator:

1) Inform the person who reported the abuse that the procedure will be started immediately;

2) check the degree to which the OS article actually coincides with the allegedly plagiarised text(s);

3) Inform the entire editors of OS about the incident in order to collectively decide on the next steps;

4) Transmits to the author of the article the evidence resulting from the comparison with the plagiarised texts, if any, and asks him to account for it.

If it turns out that the author has indeed plagiarised other texts, the editors of OS:

1) inform the author of the plagiarised contribution and the editor of the journal and/or series in which it appeared;

2) publish the official retraction of the article that appeared in OS;

3) They withdraw the contribution from the Internet;

4) do not allow the plagiarist new publications for five years.

 

 

Indexing & Abstracting 

OS appears in the main databases of journals and in the catalogues of hundreds libraries worldwide. Specifically, the journal is indexed in:

DOAJ - Directory Of Open Access Journals, https://doaj.org/toc/2724-3192

ZDB - Zeitschriften Datebank, https://zdb-katalog.de/title.xhtml?idn=1235613984&view=full&direct=true

ROAD -Directory of Open Access scholarly Resources, https://portal.issn.org/resource/ISSN/2724-3192#

Catalogue du Système Universitaire de Documentation - SUDOC, https://www.sudoc.abes.fr/cbs/DB=2.1//SRCH?IKT=12&TRM=250476355

FATCAT  - https://scholar.archive.org/fatcat/container/u5ygn5zb4zdf7okyvnsta4ecda

 

Consent and Privacy Policy 

The data collected from registered and non-registered users of this journal falls within the scope of the standard functioning of peer-reviewed journals. It includes information that makes communication possible for the editorial process; it is used to informs readers about the

authorship and editing of content; it enables collecting aggregated data on readership behaviors, as well as tracking geopolitical and social elements of scholarly communication. 

This journal’s editorial team uses this data to guide its work in publishing and improving this journal. Data that will assist in developing this publishing platform may be shared with its developer Public Knowledge Project in an anonymized and aggregated form, with appropriate exceptions such as article metrics. The data will not be sold by this journal or PKP nor will it be used for purposes other than those stated here.

The authors published in this journal are responsible for the human subject data that figures in the research reported here.

Those involved in editing this journal seek to be compliant with industry standards for data privacy, including the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) provision for “data subject rights” that include (a) breach notification; (b) right of access; (c) the right to be forgotten; (d) data portability; and (e) privacy by design.

The GDPR also allows for the recognition of “the public interest in the availability of the data,” which has a particular saliency for those involved in maintaining, with the greatest integrity possible, the public record of scholarly publishing.