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Submission

Manuscripts should be submitted electronically to:

Economics Finance

Hamid Beladi, Editor
International Review of Economics and Finance
College of Business
University of Texas at San Antonio
One UTSA Circle
San Antonio, TX 78249-0762
USA
Tel: (210) 458-7039, Fax: (210) 458-7040
iref@utsa.edu

Carl R. Chen, Editor
International Review of Economics & Finance
School of Business
University of Dayton
300 College Park
Dayton, OH 45469-2281
USA
chen@udayton.edu
Tel: (937) 229-2418, Fax: (937) 229-2477

Papers must be written in English. Submit an electronic copy (Microsoft Word file) of the manuscript via email to editorial office: iref@utsa.edu.  The submission fee should be sent to the Editorial Office of  The International Review of Economics and Finance, College of Business, University of Texas at San Antonio, One UTSA Circle, San Antonio, TX 78249-0762, Tel: 210-458-7039, Fax: 210-458-7040.

The main body of the paper must be submitted together with the title page containing the contact addresses of authors in a separate file. Papers must be in English, clearly typed and double-spaced. Submission of a paper will be held to imply that it is original unpublished work, that a significant part of it has not already been published, and that it is not being submitted for publication elsewhere. The submission fee is $80 US for all authors and should be sent as a check or money order made payable to IREF.

The cover page of the manuscript should contain complete correspondence information about the submitting author: (i) postal address, (ii) telephone and fax numbers, and (iii) e-mail address.

Referees
If you wish to get involved in the editorial process, please contact the office, or simply email your publication list, together with your address, phone, fax, and email address.

Coin with the image of Diocletian
Treat manuscripts tenderly even as Diocletian cherished cabbages. When Maximian asked him to resume the reins of the Roman empire, "he rejected the temptation with a smile of pity, calmly observing that, if he could show Maximian the cabbages which he had planted with his own hands at Salona, he should no longer be urged to relinquish the enjoyment of happiness for the pursuit of power" (Gibbon 1960, 134). Courtesy of Michael Greenhalgh

 

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Edited at
UTSA College of Business