Guidelines for Authors

Paper submission rules for collaborators

Proposals must be sent to the following email address: revistadehaa@ffyl.uncu.edu.ar

In all cases, the article proposal will be evaluated, first, by the Editorial Committee of the journal, which will control that the text complies with the guidelines for authors and does not incur plagiarism. In this first review, the text will guarantee the originality of the article using the anti-plagiarism software: Plagium (http://plagium.com/) If accepted, it will be evaluated under the double-blind mechanism by external referees. Outstanding professionals are expected to be invited to publish a contribution in their specialty. Reviews and notes will be evaluated by the Advisory Committee.

Indications for sending texts:

1. General presentation:

The text in Spanish must be sent in Word, A4 typographic box (21.0 x 29.7 cm.). Arial font, 10 points (except title, name, abstract and keywords, in Spanish and English), single spacing. Articles should not exceed 12,000 words, including footnotes, charts and tables, list of bibliography and sources. The notes, communications and commemorations, up to 6,000 words. Reviews with a maximum length of 2,000 words.

2. Cover:

The title of the article must be in the original language and central alignment. It must not contain more than twenty words, in high and low (sentence type) and in bold (Arial 14) and if it has a subtitle in normal text and in bold (Arial 14).

Below should be a title in English with the same indications, but in Arial 12.

Next, and with right justification, the name and surname of the author, or authors, is placed in bold italics and Arial 10.

Under each author, the institutional affiliation is recorded without abbreviations and if there are more than one they are separated by a slash (/) without spaces, in Arial 9. The institution(s) are listed from highest to lowest degree. Example:

National University of Whose

Faculty of Philosophy and Letters

Institute of American and Argentine History

In this same body and at the end, the city, the country and the email address of the author or authors are placed. Example:

Mendoza, Argentina

ORCID

author@gmail.com

In the following line, the Abstract is presented in Spanish and English (Abstract) in Arial 9, up to 200 words. It must include objective/s, methodological approach, sources and anticipate the main results of the work. Next, the Keywords in Spanish and English (Key words) that cannot exceed five are recorded, in lower case separated by semicolons.

3. Body of the text

The titles within the article in Arial 12, high and low (sentence type), in bold, aligned to the left and without tabulation.

Second level title in Arial, 10, high and low, in bold, aligned to the left.

If there is a title of lower hierarchy, it must be in normal text and in italics. Examples:

The economic value of cultural assets

Heritage and the economy of culture

The different types of heritage

Authors' citation in the body of the text: When concepts or ideas of another author are mentioned in a text without a textual citation, only the author's last name is included, followed by a comma and the year of publication. Examples:

…. (Perez, 2014)

Pérez (2014) suggests that…

When referring to more than one author without a textual citation, the mention order must be alphabetical. Example:

Various investigations (Pérez, 2014; Soles, 2001) support...

In references to works by the same author published in the same year, the letters of the alphabet are placed after the year. Example:

Grandson Riesco (1926a)

Grandson Riesco (1926b)

The first time a work by three to five authors is cited, the last names of all are indicated. Subsequently, only the first is cited and et al. Example:

Cervera, Pérez and Ceballos (1998) point out that “….”

In the next quote from the same text: As explained by Cervera et al. (1998) …

When there are six or more authors, the last name of the first is cited followed by et al. from the first citation.

When a corporate author is cited for the first time, the full name is placed and the acronym is indicated between the parentheses. Hereinafter, it is only referred to by the acronym. Example:

Obras Sanitarias de la Nación (OSN, 1927) explained that the problem….

OSN (1928) answered…

When a quote is reproduced through another source of information, it must be referenced as follows:

As expressed by Governor Lencinas "..." (Quoted from Nieto Riesco, 1926).

When a textual fragment of a work is reproduced in the text, the citation must be enclosed in quotation marks. The page number(s) where the quoted text appears will always be included. Examples:

Regarding this problem, Pérez (2014) argues that "..." (p. 35), a criterion that we do not share....

We adhere to this definition: "..." (Pérez, 2014, p. 45).

If different pages by the same author are cited continuously, the full parenthetical citation will be included in the first reference, and subsequent citations will only include the page number in parentheses. Example:

The situation of the plague "had affected close to a thousand inhabitants in the poorest neighborhoods" (Pérez, 2014, p. 30), but other areas of the city also had numerous patients, "close to two hundred in the Barrio La Cañuela" (p. 32), and "another hundred in the upper area of Cerro Mater" (p. 33).

The quote must be verbatim; therefore, any spelling or grammatical errors should be followed by the word sic in square brackets [sic]. To add any additional material or explanation to the citation, square brackets are used. To emphasize a word(s) in a quote, italicize the word(s), followed by a clarification in square brackets. Examples:

…“The citizens said that I could not [sic] go to the public square”….

…“Children [referring to their children] always go to school”….

... "The decision made obliged [my italics] to fulfill the commitment assumed"...

The transcription of more than 40 or more words from a source is in a separate paragraph, indented 1 cm to the left and right of the page, Arial 10, without quotation marks. The omission of a part of the text is indicated by three ellipses between parentheses (…). And if the author's name precedes the textual citation, when it ends, the page number of the citation will be specified. Examples:

We observed a strong continuity in the composition of the leadership and the bases of the Cathedral Center, which allowed it to develop its activities with greater fluidity and solvency than its peers from other geographies of the diocese. Consequently, the particular effort put by both the ecclesiastical hierarchies and by Catholic Action in the tasks carried out in the city of Río Cuarto can be attributed to a double evaluation of life in cities (Camaño Semprini, 2018, p. 73). 

As Camaño Semprini says (2018)

We observed a strong continuity in the composition of the leadership and the bases of the Cathedral Center, which allowed it to develop its activities with greater fluidity and solvency than its peers from other geographies of the diocese. Consequently, the particular effort put both by the ecclesiastical hierarchies and by Catholic Action in the tasks carried out in the city of Río Cuarto can be attributed to a double evaluation of life in cities (p. 73).

Citing historical sources

Published sources: they will be cited in the body of the text with the same criteria as the bibliography, except for newspapers, newspapers, magazines, bulletins and any other periodical publication. Example:

The evaluation of the provincial health situation showed serious deficiencies (Suárez, 1924)….

Unpublished sources and the following published sources: newspapers, newspapers, magazines, bulletins and any other periodical publication will only be cited at the bottom of the page, according to the following criteria:

Unpublished sources: The reference, as complete as possible, begins with the name of the file or reservoir consulted. Abbreviations may be used if the file and also the sources are used multiple times. Examples:

General Archive of the Nation (AGN). College of San Ignacio. Buenos Aires, Temporalities (1767-1773), Room IX, files: 7-3-7; 5-21-7; 21-6-1; 21-6-4; 6-21-6; 45-4-14.

General Archive of the Province of Mendoza (AGPM), Colonial (Co), Folder (C) 80, Document (D) 5, Mendoza, 3-8-1830, f. VII.

National Archive of Chile. Collection Notaries of Santiago, Agustín Díaz (notary public), Santiago, April 22, 1804, vol. 941, f. 64.

Collection and Archive of the Carmen de Maipú Museum (CACM), IMP_2308. Letter from the Supreme Director of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata. Santiago, April 8, 1818.

If the document comes from a digitized reservoir, it is cited in the same way and at the end it is indicated: Retrieved from http/w.w.w

Periodical publications: The full last name and initial of the author are placed. Article title. Name of the publication (in italics), place, date and page.

It will be quoted in full when a fragment of an article is reproduced verbatim. Example:

Pérez, A. The health situation in Mendoza. Diario Los Andes, Mendoza, 5-23-1918, p. 8.

When only one data(s) is extracted, or a paraphrase of a publication is presented, also in a footnote, it is indicated:

Diario Los Andes, Mendoza, 23-.5-1918, p.8.

When a source is used on numerous occasions, the full name is recorded the first time and is abbreviated in subsequent mentions. The place of publication is only mentioned the first time. Examples:

Diario Los Andes (LA), Mendoza, 5-23-1918, p. 8.

LA, 6-3-1918, p. 5

The Social Fortnight Magazine (QS), Mendoza, 6-23-1915, p. 7.

QS, 1-3-1916, p. 30.

Bulletin of the National Wine Center (BCVN) (1910), (30) Buenos Aires, pp. 20-21.

BCVN (1912) (41) pp. 10-11.

If the same source is referenced consecutively, it is repeated again. Example:

The Social Fortnight Magazine (QS), Mendoza, 6-23-1915, p. 7.

QS, 6-23-1915, p. 7.

QS, 6-23-1915, p. 7.

If the newspaper or magazine has been consulted online, at the end of the reference it is indicated: Retrieved from http/w.w.w

4. Charts, charts, graphs, tables and images

They are numbered by the Arabic system and must be referenced in the text. Before the resource, the number and title (centered, Arial 10 and single spacing) must be complete with respect to the information offered. The font(s), in Arial 9 and italics, single spacing, is located below the resource.

The images should always be in .jpg or another pixel format (do not put vector images, or charts or graphics armed with the shapes that Word brings). If you build an infographic or a synoptic table with the shapes that Word brings - arrows, balloons, callouts, connectors, brackets, etc. - you must convert everything to a .jpg image before incorporating it into the article. The same applies when you use Excel statistics or any information from another program, you have to convert everything to .jpg: pie charts, statistics and other diagrams, before inserting them into this article.

Examples:

Table nº 1: Infant mortality by department. Province of Mendoza, 1914

Source: Yearbook of the General Directorate of Statistics of the Province of Mendoza corresponding to the year 1914 (1916). Mendoza: La Tarde Printing, 1916, p. 18

Graph n°. 2: Comparison of the infant mortality rate by department.

Province of Mendoza (1910 and 1916)

Source: Own elaboration based on the Yearbook of the General Directorate of Statistics of the Province of Mendoza corresponding to the year 1910 (1912). Mendoza: Kraft Lithography Printing, p. 22; Yearbook of the General Directorate of Statistics of the Province of Mendoza corresponding to the year 1914 (1916). Mendoza: La Tarde Press, p. 18.

5. Published sources and bibliography (not placed in a footnote citation)

This section is after the conclusion of the text and is prepared in alphabetical order, distinguishing published sources from the bibliography. Titles are placed in bold, capital letters and Arial 10.

Regarding the published sources, those not referenced are placed in extenso in footnotes. The list will be limited to the works cited in the article. Whenever possible, the publications and sources available in digital format should be specified.

Both the bibliography and the published sources follow the guidelines of the APA system, 7th edition:

For books: Surname and Initial of the name of the author or authors, year of publication in parentheses. Title in italics. Publisher without abbreviations. Example:

Spinelli, M.E. (2006). The defeated winners. Antiperonism and the Liberating Revolution. Byblos. If there is more than one edition, it is placed after the title and between parentheses (2nd ed.).

Brackets are used to differentiate the year of publication used by the author and the year of the original edition of a work. Example:

Sarmiento, D.F. (1938) [1845]. Civilization or Barbarism. National University of La Plata.

If the document is a joint edition of more than one publisher, their names are recorded separated by a hyphen. Example:

Lois, C. & Hollman, V. (2013). Geography and visual culture. The uses of images in reflections on space. Prohistory-National University of Rosario.

All the names of the authors, coordinators, compilers and/or editors of a book are placed. Example:

Richard-Jorba, R.; Perez Romagnoli, E.; Barrio, P. and Sanjurjo, I. (2006). The Argentine wine region. Transformations of the territory, the economy and society 1870-1914. National University of Quilmes.

When more than one work by the same author is referenced, the last name and initial must be entered. Lines (-------) are not used and for publications of the same year, the lowercase letters of the alphabet are placed next to the year of publication. Example:

Nieto Riesco, J. (1926a). José Néstor Lencinas (Party Leader). HE.

Nieto Riesco, J. (1926b). José Nestor Lencinas (Head of State). HE.

The indication of director, coordinator and/or editor of a book is abbreviated and in capital letters after the last name and initial: (Dir.) (Dirs.) (Ed.) (Eds.) (Coord.) (Coords.) (Comp .) (Eds.). Example:

Girbal-Blacha, N. and Regina de Mendonça, R. (Dirs.). Agrarian corporations and public policies in Latin America. Prohistory.

For book chapters: surname and initial of the name of the author or authors, year of publication in parentheses. Name of the chapter in normal font. The initial letter of the name of the person responsible for the edition with a period and the last name. It is placed between parentheses if it is coordinator, compiler, director or editor with abbreviation and in capital letters. Book title in italics. Editorial and pages. Example:

Ospital, M.S. (2013). Wine entrepreneurs and public policies. Argentina (1905-1943). In N. Girbal-Blacha and R. Regina de Mendonça (Dirs.). Agrarian corporations and public policies in Latin America (pp.21-36). Prohistory.

For articles: last name and initial of the author's name, year of publication in parentheses. Qualification. Name of the journal in italics, vol., number of the journal in parentheses, pages. Example:

Di Liscio, C. (2000). About the Indians. Pampa Magazine, 3 (2), 5-21.

All scientific articles, full journals, parts of articles, audio, video, images, and even software that are cited in the article and that are assigned a DOI (digital object identifier) number must be included by the author in the citation. DOIs can be obtained from this web page: http://search.crossref.org/ In this case, the URL is omitted. If it has a permalink (it is a permanent URL), it must also be placed. Examples:

Hora, R. (2018). How did Tulio Halperin Donghi think about interwar politics? Social Studies, 1(54), 15-41. https://doi.org/10.14409/es.v54i1.7601

Girbal-Blacha, N. (1992). Tradition and modernization in Argentine cereal agriculture. Jarbuch fur Geschichte von Staat, Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft Lateinamerikas, 29, 369-395. Permalink: https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/articulo?codigo=2556134

Papers and conferences: last name and initial of the author(s), year of the scientific meeting in parentheses. Qualification. Type of intervention (lecture, conference, round table, poster) and on behalf of the scientific meeting. Place, days and month.

Example:

Rodriguez Vazquez, F.; Ortega, L. and Hirschegger, I. (2019). Productive infrastructures and economic diversification in Mendoza (Argentina), 1932-1943. Paper presented at the VI Latin American Congress of Economic History. Santiago de Chile, July 23 and 25.

In the event that a paper has been published in Proceedings or another document, the same criteria is followed. Only that instead of Presentation, Minutes are recorded. Example:

Muñoz, J.G. (2005). Vineyards in the city of Santiago del Nuevo Extremo, Chile, 16th century. Proceedings of the III Congress of Uruguayan Wine History and I Congress of Regional Wine History. Montevideo, November 10 and 11. Recovered from:

https://www.fhuce.edu.uy/images/CEIL/eventos/III%20Congreso.pdf

Unpublished theses: last name and initial of the author, year of defense of the thesis. Title in italics. Type of thesis with the clarification that it is unpublished. Institution and place where the thesis was defended. Example:

Luis, N. (2018). The espadrille in the public space. The effects of Lencinista politics in the Mendoza public space. Unpublished doctoral thesis. Faculty of Philosophy and Letters, National University of Cuyo, Mendoza, Argentina.

Sources referenced in the body of the text: All published sources that were placed in the body of the work must be referenced in the final list, according to the criteria indicated for the books of the bibliography. Examples:

Municipality of Córdoba (1936). Memory of the Executive Department of the city of Córdoba. s/e.

Suarez, L. (1924). Report presented to the honorable legislature by the Minister of Industries and Public Works, Engineer Leopoldo Suárez. Year 1922-1923. Official Printing.

Those who submit papers to the Revista de Historia Americana y Argentina, published by the Institute of the same name of the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters of the National University of Cuyo (Mendoza, Argentina), automatically grant an exclusive and unlimited license of their manuscript to said publication. Consequently, as the distribution of the aforementioned Journal is not for profit but for academic purposes, the author(s) authorizes its dissemination in printed format and electronic media, both on the local network and via the Internet.