Proposed Special Issue
Special issues highlight emerging questions in chromosome science and create focused scholarly dialogue.
Curate A High Impact Collection
A special issue can shape the direction of an evolving field by curating timely research around a shared theme. It connects new theoretical frameworks with empirical studies and provides readers with a coherent, high impact collection. Special issues often generate strong engagement and targeted citations for contributors.
Guest editors also gain opportunities to mentor emerging scholars and build lasting research networks around a shared chromosome focus.
What A Strong Proposal Includes
Clear Theme
A focused topic with a strong chromosome biology rationale and relevance.
Guest Editor Team
Names, affiliations, and expertise that demonstrate leadership in the topic.
Scope And Contribution
Explain how the issue advances theory, methods, or clinical practice.
Potential Authors
A preliminary list of likely contributors or research communities.
We prioritize themes that connect chromosome structure, genome stability, and diagnostic applications across biological systems.
Selection Criteria
Proposals are evaluated for originality, alignment with JC scope, feasibility, and the strength of the guest editor team. We value diversity in perspectives and geographic representation. Guest editors should explain how conflicts of interest will be managed. Outreach plans are also considered.
Feasibility matters. We consider expected submission volume, reviewer availability, and the ability to manage peer review within a clear timeline.
Roles And Timeline
Guest editors develop the call for papers, recommend reviewers, and provide subject expertise. Final acceptance decisions remain with the journal editors to ensure consistent standards. The editorial office handles production workflows and policy compliance.
Typical special issue cycles run 6 to 10 months from call release to final publication. Timelines can be adjusted for complex themes or extended submissions.
Example Themes
These examples are illustrative. We welcome proposals that open new directions for chromosome research and clinical practice, including diagnostic workflows.
After Approval
Once approved, the editorial office will finalize the call for papers, open a dedicated submission track, and confirm milestone dates. Guest editors receive guidance on reviewer selection, decision templates, and ethical standards to keep quality consistent. Promotional assets are provided for visibility and community engagement and reach.
Accepted articles are published on a rolling basis and later organized into the special issue collection. This approach keeps momentum high and supports timely discovery.
How To Propose
Send a short proposal (2 to 3 pages) outlining the theme, aims, guest editor team, and a preliminary timeline. Include a draft call for papers and a list of potential contributors if available. After review, the editorial office will respond with feedback and next steps. Include preferred milestones or related conferences.
Guest editors are expected to promote the call through conferences, society networks, and professional mailing lists to ensure a strong submission pipeline. Collaborative teams are welcome.
Submit Your Special Issue Proposal
Email your proposal and supporting details to the editorial office for review.