The Tensions of Europe/Inventing Europe Working Papers

The Tensions of Europe/Inventing Europe Working Papers Series aims:

1.   to provide an internet environment for the exchange of ideas and research findings among scholars in the Tensions of Europe Network and in the four projects funded through the ESF Collaborative Research Programme “Inventing Europe: Technology in the Making of Europe, 1850 to the Present

2.   to provide an internet platform for intellectual debate between Tensions of Europe/Inventing Europe and the broader intellectual and policy-making community.


The editors of the working papers series accept contributions from scholars participating in the Tensions of Europe network and the Inventing Europe program as well as from other scholars whose work addresses issues pertinent to Tensions of Europe/Inventing Europe. Criteria for accepting the paper include language, structure, and argument. All papers related to the Tensions of Europe or Inventing Europe agendas will be considered for publication. Project meeting reports and progress reports may also be published. In the event of issues with dual publication or for other reasons, papers may be password protected at the author’s discretion. The password will be available to all members of the Tensions of Europe/Inventing Europe community.


Instructions for authors: 

  1. Working papers will be published in electronic form. Papers should be submitted as Word (.doc) documents to one of the editors. After editing, editors will convert the document to PDF format for placement on the website.

  2. Language of the series is in principle English, with optional co-publishing of the paper in another language.

  3. Length of a working paper should not as a rule exceed ten thousand words

  4. Recommendations for layout: use Arial, 11pt, single spacing. Please leave headers empty for ToE/IE working paper series information (Paper No. etc.)

  5. Information about the author(s) will appear on the cover page and should contain name(s), contact information, project (if any), and major area of interest (in history of technology)

  6. We will require a brief abstract (300-400 words) and 5 keywords for placement on the website.

 

For further details, please contact the editors:

Cornelis Disco, University of Twente (the Netherlands)
disco[at]utwente.nl
(EuroCommons, Project Leader)

Helena Durnová, Brno University of Technology (Czech Republic)
durnova[at]feec.vutbr.cz
(Software for Europe, Project Member)

FOR THE LIST OF WORKING PAPERS CLICK HERE.