Information For Authors

If you want to submit your manuscript for publication in this journal, please get acquainted with the Editorial Policy and browse Submission section.

Prospective authors should be registered as an author, login, and then submit the manuscript.

General Guidelines for the Authors

Generally, the approximate length of the article in the RMJ is 6000–9000 words.

The title page of a submitted paper should include title, abstract, information about the authors, keywords (at least two) and JEL codes.
Please, provide full names, titles, and affiliations (with complete postal addresses) of all authors, along with e-mails on the title page of the paper.
Abstract should be up to 150-200 words and not less than 100.

Please use one-and-half spacing and a 12-point readable font (Times New Roman preferred) for the text. All the text should be left-justified.
Use the footnotes that are incorporated into the text at the end of the each page and consequently numbered.
Figures and tables could be incorporated into the text or appear at the end of a paper with proper indication "Insert Table/Figure N here" in the text. Within the tables and figures, please, indicate a zero (0) in numbers less than 1 (e.g., 0,12, not  ,12).

All the proper acknowledgements should be included into Acknowledgements section before the list of references.

Citations in the text should appear in [lastname, year] format and are listed alphabetically at the end of a paper. Three or fewer authors should be written out at the each citation in the text. For citations with four authors and more use [first author's lastname et al., year] form of presentation. All references must have a corresponding citation in the text and vice versa.

The examples of referencing style

Rumelt R. 1974. Strategy, Structure and Economic Performance. Harvard University Press: Cambridge, MA.
Collis D. 1996. Organizational capability as a source of profit. In: Moingeon B., Edmondson A. (eds). Organizational Learning and Competitive Advantage. Sage: London, U.K.; 139–163.
Hamel G. 1996. Strategy as revolution. Harvard Business Review 74 (4): 69–80.

Online citations should end with the date of access, like: (asessed 05.12.2005).