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Indian Development Policy Review

Indian Development Policy Review

Frequency :Bi-Annual

ISSN :2583-3596

Peer Reviewed Journal

Indian Development Policy Review (IDPR) publishes original high-quality research in economic development. The IDPR publishes rigorous analytical papers, theoretical and empirical, which deal with contemporary growth problems of emerging countries, including the transition economies. Whereas the level of the IDPR is academic, the tools presented are of value to policy-makers and researchers, especially those in developing countries.

The IDPR is a refereed journal, dedicated to the publication of high-quality peer reviewed manuscripts on a wide range of topics in development economics, including:

Aging Population
Agricultural Development
Agricultural Economics and Policy Research
Commercial Policy
Country Studies
Development Economics
Economic Policies
Environmental Development
Financial Policies
Formal and Informal Labor Markets
Growth Theories
Human Development
Income Distribution
Industrial Development
Institutional Development
International Migration
Labor Policies
Natural Resources
Population and the Environment
Productivity
Rural Development
Social Development
Technological Change
Trade Policies

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

1. Submission.

Manuscripts must be written in good English and should be submitted through e-mail: editoridpr@gmail.com. Manuscripts should be submitted as a single MS-Word file including all materials.

Editor-in-Chief:-

Dr. KDR. P. ARUNACHALAM
Professor
Department of Applied Economics
Cochin University of Science and Technology
Cochin University, Cochin – 682 022 (Kerala), India
e-mail: editoridpr@gmail.com

2. Title Page.

The first page of the manuscript must contain: the full title; the affiliation and full address with email ID of all authors and the corresponding author; the second page must contain an abstract of 250 words or less.

3. Abstract.

Author(s) will need to write abstract briefly and clearly the main aims and findings/conclusions of the work; it should provide the reader a clear idea of what has been achieved. The length of the abstract should be within 200-300 words.

4. Abbreviations.

Any word or words to be abbreviated should be written in full when first mentioned followed by the abbreviation in parenthesis.

5. Illustrations.

All illustrations of any kind should be submitted as sequentially numbered figures, illustrations should be inserted in the main body of the manuscript text.

6. Tables and Supplementary Material.

Data must be kept to a minimum. Tables should be numbered and headed with short titles. As with illustrations, they should insert in the main manuscript text.

7. Acknowledgements.

Acknowledgements should appear at the end of the text.

8. References.

References should appear in the text as Smith (1992) or Smith et al. (1998). The author should make sure that there is a strict one-to-one correspondence between the names and the years in the text and those on the reference list. The reference list should appear at the end of the main text, before tables and figures. It should be listed in alphabetical order by author’s name. References should appear as follows:

For monographs: Hansen, J. D., 2001. European Integration: An Economic Perspective. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

For contributions to collective works: Laursen, F., 1995. ‘On studying European integration theory and political economy’, in F. Laursen (ed.),

The Political Economy of European Integration, European Institute of Public Administration, Kluwer Law International, Maastricht. For periodicals: Wyplosz, C., (1997). ‘EMU: why and how it might happen’, Journal of Economic Perspectives,  4, 3-22.

9. Footnotes.

These should be numbered consecutively in the text.

10. Appendix:

At the end of paper