Requirements to Extended Abstracts
Extended abstracts with a length of 5 to 15 pages are accepted for publication.
Font: Times New Roman 14, line spacing: 1, Page margins: 2 cm on all sides. References are to be placed at the end of the text.
Source references are provided in square brackets in alphabetical order and must include the page number(s) of the theoretical proposition or quote used by the author. Example: [1, p. 34–35]. Multiple sources in a single citation are separated by a semicolon. Example: [1, p. 34–35; 3, p. 45]. The list of cited literature and sources is provided at the end of the article in alphabetical order. References in foreign languages are encouraged.
Figure titles and numbers are placed below the figures. Table titles and numbers are placed above the tables. Tables, diagrams, figures, formulas, and graphs must not exceed the specified margins (font size within tables and figures must be no less than 13 pt). Figures should be placed in the text as they are mentioned and must have thematic titles below them (e.g., Fig. 1. Title).
Article Structure:
- Article Title: 14 pt font, bold, no hyphenation, centered. Abbreviations and acronyms are not permitted in the title.
- Author(s): Full name, affiliation (university/organization, city, country), author’s email(s), ORCID (if available).
- Abstract: Must reflect the purpose of the work, research methods, results, novelty, field of application, recommendations, and conclusions (no more than 200 words).
- Keywords: 3–10 words or phrases that carry the main semantic load in the text.
- Bibliography: Bibliographic references to sources are placed at the end of the article.
Extended abstract’s file name — Author’s full name and the word “Article”: “Ivanov I.I. Statya”.
Bibliography formatting:
Examples for Article
Author1, A.B., Author2, C.D. 2013. Title of the cited article. Journal Title 1(1): 100–120.
Sikkema, R., Junginger, M., Pichler, W., Hayes, S., Faaij, A.P. 2010. The international logistics of wood pellets for heating and power production in Europe: costs, energy input and greenhouse gas balances of pellet consumption in Italy, Sweden and the Netherlands. Biofuels, Bioproducts and Biorefining 4: 132–153.
Barney, J.B. 1991. Firm resources and sustained competitive advantage. Journal of Management 17(1): 99–120.
Examples for Book
Author1, A., Author2, B. 2013. Book Title, 3rd ed. Publisher, Publisher Location, Country, 222 pp.
Hackett, S. 2006. Environmental and Natural Resource Economics: Theory, Policy, and the Sustainable Society. M.E. Sharpe, New York, 356 pp.
Dorsman, A., Westerman, W., Karan, M.B., Arslan, Ö. (ed.) 2011. Financial Aspects in Energy: A European Perspective. Springer, Berlin, 400 pp.
Black, H.S., Hart, R.C., Peterson, O.M. 1988. Laboratory Management: Principles and Practice. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York, 242 pp.
Examples for Book Chapter
Author1, A., Author2, B. 2013. Title of the chapter. In Book Title, 2nd ed., Editor1, Editor2, (Eds.), Publisher, Publisher Location, Country, Volume 3, pp. 150–200.
Leach, J., 2013. Impacts of the zebra mussel on water quality and fish spawning reefs of Western Lake Erie. In: T. Nalepa and D. Schloesser (Eds.), Zebra mussels: biology, impacts and control, Lewis Publishers, Ann Arbor, USA, pp. 381–397.
Ansoff, H.I., Stewart, J.M., 2011. Strategies for a technology -based business. In: R.R. Rothberg (Ed.), Corporate Strategy and Product Innovation, The Free Press, New York, pp. 501–529.
Examples for Report
European Environment Agency EEA 2006. How much bioenergy can Europe produce without harming the environment? EEA-Report 07/2006. Copenhagen.
Thraen, D., Fritsche, U., Hennig, C., Rensberg, N., Krautz, A. 2012. IEA Bioenergy Task 40: Country Report Germany 2011. Leipzig, Darmstadt.
Examples for Proceedings
Author1, A.B., Author2, C.D., Author3, E.F. 2013. Title of Presentation. In Title of the Collected Work (if available), Proceedings of the Name of the Conference, Location of Conference, Country, Date of Conference, Editor1, Editor2, Eds. Publisher, City, Country, Abstract Number (optional), Pagination (optional).
Verhoeff, F., Pels, J.R., Boersma, A.R., Zwart, R.W.R., Kiel, J.H.A. 2011. Torrefaction technology heading for demonstration. In: Proceedings of the 19th European Biomass Conference and Exhibition, ICC Berlin, Germany 6-10 June 2011, pp.80–86.
Brown, A.L. and Daneke, G.A., 1988. Adaptive technology management in Japan. In: L.R. Gomez-Mejia and M.W. Lawless (Eds.), Proceedings of Managing the High Technology Firm. The Graduate School of Business, University of Colorado, Boulder.
Examples for Thesis
Author1, A.B. 2013. Title of Thesis, Level of Thesis, Degree-Granting University, Location of University, 100 pp.
Strunk, J.L. 2010. The extraction of mercury from sediment and the geochemical partitioning of mercury in sediments from Lake Superior, M. S. thesis, Michigan State Univ., East Lansing, 90 pp.
Korhonen, S. 2006. A capability-based view of organizational renewal: combining opportunity—and advantage—seeking growth in large, established European and North American wood-industry companies. Dissertationes Forestales 202. Dissertation. 74 p.
Examples for Internet Source
Title of Document. 2013. Title of Website. URL. [Accessed Month Date Year].
T-Day: The Battle for Taiwan. 2021. Reuters. https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/taiwan-china-wargames. [Accessed November 23, 2023].
268 traffic accident fatalities in September 2021. 2021. Destatis. Online-Database of the Federal Republic of Germany. https://www.destatis.de/EN/Press/2021/11/PE21_533_46241.html;jsessionid=EB38E0A050CD48702E8066B72E46B0FC.live732. [Accessed November 23, 2023].
