Statistical Journal of the IAOS
This is the flagship journal of the International Association for Official Statistics and is expected to be widely circulated and subscribed to by individuals and institutions in all parts of the world.
The main aim of the journal is to support the IAOS mission by publishing articles to promote the understanding and advancement of official statistics and to foster the development of effective and efficient official statistical services on a global basis. Papers are expected to be of wide interest to readers. Such papers may or may not contain strictly original material. All papers are refereed.
The journal has an Editor-in-Chief who is responsible for ensuring that the journal focuses on current and emerging issues and challenges related to the management, production and use of official statistics and related public policy matters. The journal should publish papers of wide interest to both users and producers of official statistics. The journal should encourage papers with a focus on the basic principles for official statistics covering areas such as the importance of applying the best scientific methods, the need for statistical independence, balancing the needs of users with the burden on respondents, the continuing challenges around confidentiality, and the growing need for consistency and coherence across statistical domains and over time and for international comparability.
Authors and referees of all papers should bear in mind that many of the readers of the journal (particularly in the developing world) do not have easy access to libraries or to other journals, and therefore are strongly encouraged to make the papers as self-contained as possible, while of course giving proper bibliographic credit. Papers of more than 30 manuscript pages, including diagrams, tables and references, will normally not be considered for publication.
This is the flagship journal of the International Association for Official Statistics and is expected to be widely circulated and subscribed to by individuals and institutions in all parts of the world. The main aim of the journal is to support the IAOS mission by publishing articles to promote the understanding and advancement of official statistics and to foster the development of effective and efficient official statistical services on a global basis. Papers are expected to be of wide interest to readers. Such papers may or may not contain strictly original material. All papers are refereed. The journal has an Editor-in-Chief who is responsible for ensuring that the journal focuses on current and emerging issues and challenges related to the management, production and use of official statistics and related public policy matters. The journal should publish papers of wide interest to both users and producers of official statistics. The journal should encourage papers with a focus on the basic principles for official statistics covering areas such as the importance of applying the best scientific methods, the need for statistical independence, balancing the needs of users with the burden on respondents, the continuing challenges around confidentiality, and the growing need for consistency and coherence across statistical domains and over time and for international comparability. As a guide, articles relating, but not exclusively, to the following broad topics will be of interest to the journal:
Developments and challenges for both global and national statistical systems
Statistical independence and legislation
New directions for official statistics
Delivering relevant and effective statistical services
New and innovative ways of increasing uses and users of official statistics
Quality of official statistics
Engagement of producers
Innovative use of ICT for official statistics
Creative use of both new and existing statistical sources
Organisation of statistical services
Statistical infrastructure and tools
Management of statistical and related meta data
Innovative statistical products and services
Training of statistical staff, users and producers
Improving statistical literacy in the community
Authors and referees of all papers should bear in mind that many of the readers of the journal (particularly in the developing world) do not have easy access to libraries or to other journals, and therefore are strongly encouraged to make the papers as self-contained as possible, while of course giving proper bibliographic credit. Papers of more than 30 manuscript pages, including diagrams, tables and references, will normally not be considered for publication.
Pietro Gennari | International Association for Official Statistics, Italy |
Pieter Everaers | International Association for Official Statistics, Austria |
Stephen Penneck | International Statistical Institute, UK |
Kirsten West | International Association for Official Statistics, USA |
Qasem Alzoubi | Jordanian National Data Center for Science and Technology, Jordan |
Dario Buono | Eurostat, European Union (EU), Luxemburg |
Victor Alfredo Bustos | National Institute of Statistics and Geography of Mexico (INEGI), Mexico |
Jillian Campbell | Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, Canada |
Fernando Cantu-Bazaldua | United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), Austria |
Eileen Capilit | United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, Ethiopia |
Elisabetta Carfagna | University of Bologna, Italy |
Jose Luis Cervera Ferri | DevStat Servicios de Consultoría Estadística, Spain |
Oliver Chinganya | United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, Ethiopia |
Michele Connolly | International Group for Indigenous Health Measurement, USA |
Olivier Dupriez | The World Bank, USA |
Jean-Michel Durr | CAOS Consulting, France |
Jessamyn Encarnacion | UN Women, USA |
Pirmin Fessler | Austrian Central Bank, Austria |
Peter Hackl | Vienna University of Economics and Business , Austria |
Hossein Hassani | Webster University, Austria |
Ivo Havinga | United Nations Secretariat, USA |
Daniel Hopp | UNCTAD, Switzerland |
Ashish Kumar | Manipal University Jaipur, India |
Steve Mac Feely | World Health Organization, Switzerland |
Asta Manninen | tatistical Journal of the International Association for Official Statistics, Finland |
Angela Me | United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Austria |
Kate Michalopoulou | Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences, Greece |
Hernan Daniel Munoz | Sapienza University, Italy |
Per Nymand-Andersen | European Central Bank, Germany |
Francesca Perucci | Open Data Watch, USA |
John Pleis | National Center for Health Statistics, USA |
Megan Price | Human Rights Data Analysis Group, USA |
Aurel Schubert | Vienna School of International Studies, Austria |
Denise Silva | Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), Brazil |
Jan Smit | United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, Thailand |
Gemma van Halderen | Australian Government, Australia |
Rosanna Verde | Università della Campania “Luigi Vanvitelli”, Italy |
Kieran Walsh | Department of Statistics ILO, Statistical Standards and Methods Unit, Switzerland |
Michael Yang | NORC at the University of Chicago, USA |
Linda Young | United States Department of Agriculture, USA |
Wesley Yung | International Cooperation and Methodology Innovation Center, Statistics Canada, Canada |