JoMaCC
Journal of Modern and Contemporary Christianity open access | peer reviewed
Aims & Scope
This open-access, peer-reviewed journal offers a space to investigate, according to the criteria of historical research, the phenomena related to Christianity and the Christian Churches from the eighteenth century to the present day. This is an age in which Christianity and the Churches are confronted with advanced modernity and the dynamics of secularisation; and during which they develop a process of progressive globalisation, which has become increasingly evident in the last century, especially in the last decades. The journal is the result of the collaboration of scholars from different countries. Published every six months, the journal will alternate between monographic issues (including call for papers) and miscellaneous issues. As an expression of its international openness and awareness of the different languages that characterise the scientific community of historians of Christianity and the Churches and its articulations, the journal will publish each year an issue entirely in English and another one with contributions in French, English, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish and German. JoMaCC is a journal of the Department of Humanities of Ca’ Foscari University of Venice.
Permalink http://doi.org/10.30687/JoMaCC/1864-4239 | e-ISSN 2785-6046 | Periodicity biannual | Language en, fr, it
Copyright This is an open-access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction is permitted, provided that the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. The license allows for commercial use. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
Latest published issue
- 4 | 2 | 2025
- Il cristianesimo a confronto con gli sviluppi storici. Casi di studio di un contesto globale e multiconfessionale
- Oct. 27, 2025
- 34 download 222 search
- Editorial
- 1 | 2 | 2022
- 18 download 75 search
- Frozen Frontiers: Jesuit Evangelization and Colonial Adaptation in Alaska (1867-1919)
- Claudio Ferlan
- Oct. 27, 2025 | 4 | 2 | 2025
- 2 download 23 search
- Il cristianesimo in un’epoca post-liberale. Lindbeck, Hauerwas, Hays
- Enrico Cerasi
- Oct. 27, 2025 | 4 | 2 | 2025
- 4 download 23 search
- «Res nova in iure». La nomina dei vescovi del Vietnam (1975-2024)
- Enrico Galavotti
- Oct. 27, 2025 | 4 | 2 | 2025
- 5 download 20 search
- Editorial
- Claus Arnold, Valentina Ciciliot, Giovanni Vian
- Oct. 27, 2025 | 4 | 2 | 2025
- 5 download 29 search
- L’arcivescovo Denis Hurley e Humanae vitae tra legge naturale e collegialità episcopale
- Laura Ballestrazzi
- Oct. 27, 2025 | 4 | 2 | 2025
- 57 download 221 search
- Warren County (NC), 1982: Churches as Actors of Environmental Justice
- Michele Rigodanzo
- May 12, 2025 | 4 | 2 | 2025
- 10 download 51 search
- Editorial
- Claus Arnold, Valentina Ciciliot, Giovanni Vian
- April 4, 2025 | 4 | 1 | 2025
- 58 download 394 search
- Pope Francis and Women: The Ambivalences of a Pontificate
- Regina Heyder
- April 4, 2025 | 4 | 1 | 2025
- 15 download 179 search
- Le Pape François et la Chine
- Benoît Vermander
- April 4, 2025 | 4 | 1 | 2025
- 30 download 231 search
- Il ‘Patriarca verde’ Bartolomeo I: la missione eco-teologica e il rilancio dell’Ortodossia
- Alfredo Gabrielli
- March 4, 2025 | 4 | 1 | 2025
- 14 download 128 search
- Il confronto tra cristianesimo e comunismo nella secolarizzazione del XX secolo
- Giambattista Scirè
- March 4, 2025 | 4 | 1 | 2025
- 36 download 219 search
- The Diary of the Second Vatican Council by Loris Francesco Capovilla ( 11-25 October 1962)
- Enrico Galavotti
- Dec. 18, 2024 | 4 | 1 | 2025
- 27 download 93 search
- Editorial
- Giovanni Vian
- Oct. 24, 2024 | 3 | 2 | 2024
- 29 download 121 search
- Perspectives on Ecumenism in the Twenty-First Century
- Fulvio Ferrario
- Oct. 24, 2024 | 3 | 2 | 2024
- 22 download 128 search
- Pope Francis and Catholicism in Germany
- Gerhard Kruip
- Oct. 24, 2024 | 3 | 2 | 2024
- 94 download 274 search
- Synodality and Primacy in the Pontificate of Pope Francis
- Massimo Faggioli
- Oct. 24, 2024 | 3 | 2 | 2024
- 13 download 103 search
- The Narrative Style of an Anti-Clerical Pope
- Vincenzo Pace
- Oct. 24, 2024 | 3 | 2 | 2024
- 18 download 126 search
- The Pope and the Emeritus. On the Co-Existence of Bergoglio and Ratzinger
- Enrico Galavotti
- Oct. 24, 2024 | 3 | 2 | 2024
- 40 download 152 search
- Francis’ Papacy Analyzed from a Historical Perspective
- Diego Mauro
- Oct. 24, 2024 | 3 | 2 | 2024
- 44 download 362 search
- A ‘Factory’ of Encyclicals
- Alejandro Mario Dieguez
- April 23, 2024 | 3 | 1 | 2024
- 24 download 186 search
- How to Promote Peace after the Atomic Bomb?
- Augustin Laffay
- April 23, 2024 | 3 | 1 | 2024
- 46 download 266 search
- In the Wake of Tradition: the Holy Office as Guardian of Faith and Customs during the Pontificate of Pius XII
- Manuela Barbolla
- April 23, 2024 | 3 | 1 | 2024
- 26 download 213 search
- Otto Karrer and the Holy Office
- Dominik Heringer
- April 23, 2024 | 3 | 1 | 2024
- 28 download 191 search
- Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, Elusive Target of the Holy Office (1931-50)
- Mercè Prats
- April 23, 2024 | 3 | 1 | 2024
- 29 download 236 search
- Some Notes and Questions around New Research Perspectives on the Roman Magisterium in the Mid-Twentieth Century
- Giovanni Vian
- April 23, 2024 | 3 | 1 | 2024
- 31 download 289 search
- The Situationsethik through the Papers of the Holy Office (1951-58)
- Federico Ferrari
- April 23, 2024 | 3 | 1 | 2024
- 39 download 262 search
- The Holy Office’s File on the Encyclical Humani generis
- Étienne Fouilloux
- April 23, 2024 | 3 | 1 | 2024
- 34 download 168 search
- “The Encyclical Pascendi of modern times”
- Sabine Schratz, Daniele Premoli
- April 23, 2024 | 3 | 1 | 2024
- 24 download 170 search
- “Si vuol cambiar tutto, si critica tutto”
- Michael Pfister
- April 23, 2024 | 3 | 1 | 2024
- 29 download 248 search
- Concluding Remarks: The Magisterium of Pius XII in a Historical Perspective
- Klaus Unterburger
- April 23, 2024 | 3 | 1 | 2024
- 70 download 304 search
- The Roman Magisterium in the Twentieth Century: New Perspectives from the Vatican Archives
- Claus Arnold
- April 23, 2024 | 3 | 1 | 2024
- 65 download 565 search
- Did Pius XII Change a Dogma in 1947?
- Matthias Daufratshofer
- April 23, 2024 | 3 | 1 | 2024
- 78 download 366 search
- The Holy See and the Question of Sending Observers to the World Conferences of the International Ecumenical Movement
- Saretta Marotta
- April 23, 2024 | 3 | 1 | 2024
- 11 download 86 search
- Introduction
- Claus Arnold, Valentina Ciciliot, Giovanni Vian
- Feb. 6, 2024 | 2 | 2 | 2023
- 39 download 209 search
- Churches Before the Russian-Ukrainian War
- Piercamillo Falivene
- Feb. 6, 2024 | 2 | 2 | 2023
- 28 download 152 search
- Czech Catholic Modernism
- Tomáš Petráček
- Oct. 31, 2023 | 2 | 2 | 2023
- 44 download 259 search
- Neoconservatives’ Reading of Catholic Social Teaching
- Fulvia Dellavedova
- Oct. 31, 2023 | 2 | 2 | 2023
- 32 download 179 search
- Reimagining Religious Life and Social Apostolate
- Maite De Beukeleer, Dries Bosschaert, Karen Kennes
- Oct. 31, 2023 | 2 | 2 | 2023
- 53 download 227 search
- Journey to Pragmatism: The History of the American Religious Right in the ‘90s
- Alberto Concina
- Oct. 31, 2023 | 2 | 2 | 2023
- 28 download 233 search
- Breaking through the Stained-Glass Ceiling During John Paul II’s Pontificate?
- Charles Mercier
- May 16, 2023 | 2 | 1 | 2023
- 56 download 350 search
- Adriana Zarri: The Power of a Lay Woman’s Voice
- Mariangela Maraviglia
- May 16, 2023 | 2 | 1 | 2023
- 22 download 166 search
- Charisma, Gender and ‘Glocality’: Catholic Charismatic Women in the 1970s
- John Maiden
- May 16, 2023 | 2 | 1 | 2023
- 27 download 210 search
- Crossing the Stained-Glass Ceiling of Theology
- Clarisse Tesson
- May 16, 2023 | 2 | 1 | 2023
- 22 download 146 search
- Editorial
- Valentina Ciciliot, John Maiden, Charles Mercier
- May 16, 2023 | 2 | 1 | 2023
- 39 download 195 search
- From the Silent Revolution to Sexual Abuse Scandals
- Céline Béraud
- May 16, 2023 | 2 | 1 | 2023
- 83 download 328 search
- Recovering the Legacy of the Thought of Catholic Lay Women (1945-62)
- Natalia Núñez Bargueño
- May 16, 2023 | 2 | 1 | 2023
- 24 download 252 search
- Progressismus gallicus in French and Belgian relationes ad limina from 1947 to 1957
- Patrizia Luciani
- Dec. 16, 2022 | 1 | 2 | 2022
- 10 download 223 search
- A Mirroring Effect. Themes and Problems from relationes ad limina for a Profile of the Italian Episcopate After World War II
- Carlo Urbani
- Dec. 16, 2022 | 1 | 2 | 2022
- 9 download 220 search
- Between Repression and Defence
- Ivan Portelli
- Dec. 13, 2022 | 1 | 2 | 2022
- 26 download 264 search
- The US Catholic Church after World War II: Reflections on the relationes ad limina (1949-54)
- Valentina Ciciliot
- Dec. 13, 2022 | 1 | 2 | 2022
- 15 download 282 search
- Notes about the Uses of the relationes ad limina Produced During the Pontificate of Pius XII
- Enrico Galavotti
- Dec. 13, 2022 | 1 | 2 | 2022
- 27 download 255 search
- The relationes ad limina of the German Bishops
- Francesco Tacchi
- Dec. 13, 2022 | 1 | 2 | 2022
- 35 download 336 search
- Looking for Traces of the Ecumenical Question in the relationes ad limina of the German Bishops (1948-58)
- Saretta Marotta
- Dec. 13, 2022 | 1 | 2 | 2022
- 19 download 343 search
- The Scandinavian Catholic Missions in the relationes ad limina to Propaganda Fide (1948-58)
- Daiana Menti
- Dec. 13, 2022 | 1 | 2 | 2022
- 23 download 270 search
- Religious Reconquest, Social Commitment and Marks of Secularisation in relationes ad limina of some Spanish Bishops (1947-57)
- Enrico Baruzzo
- Dec. 13, 2022 | 1 | 2 | 2022
- 26 download 150 search
- Cardinal Bagnasco President of the Italian Bishops’ Conference (2007-17)
- Stefania Borsatto
- April 29, 2022 | 1 | 1 | 2022
- 69 download 294 search
- Expose “the doctrine in full” and Adjust “as appropriate”
- Giovanni Vian
- April 29, 2022 | 1 | 1 | 2022
- 23 download 175 search
- The Vatican’s Policy of Welcoming the Foreign Faithful: An Example of Two Dioceses in France and Italy
- Eva Salerno
- April 29, 2022 | 1 | 1 | 2022
- 74 download 502 search
- The Catholic Church Sex Abuse Crisis
- Sophia Rita Jadda
- April 29, 2022 | 1 | 1 | 2022
- 51 download 189 search
- Editorial
- Claus Arnold, Valentina Ciciliot, Giovanni Vian
- April 29, 2022 | 1 | 1 | 2022
- 24 download 194 search
- The Novelist and Social Catholicism: George Fonsegrive’s Le Fils de l’Esprit
- Charles Talar
- April 29, 2022 | 1 | 1 | 2022
- 45 download 275 search
- Measuring Social Media Marketing Strategies of Christian Female Religious Leaders
- Cristina Da Rold
- April 29, 2022 | 1 | 1 | 2022
- 20 download 408 search
- 4 | 1 | 2025
- April 4, 2025
- 79 download 674 search
- 3 | 2 | 2024
- Giovanni Vian
- Oct. 24, 2024
- 331 download 2100 search
- 3 | 1 | 2024
- Claus Arnold, Giovanni Vian
- April 23, 2024
- 88 download 741 search
- 2 | 2 | 2023
- Oct. 31, 2023
- 314 download 1030 search
- 2 | 1 | 2023
- John Maiden, Charles Mercier, Valentina Ciciliot
- May 16, 2023
- 1001 download 1230 search
- 1 | 2 | 2022
- Dec. 13, 2022
- 776 download 1491 search
- 1 | 1 | 2022
- April 29, 2022
-
4 | 1 | 2025
April 4, 2025 -
Francesco: oltre un decennio di pontificato
Oct. 24, 2024 -
The Roman Magisterium in the Twentieth Century: New Perspectives from the Vatican Archives
April 23, 2024 -
Christian Churches Between the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries
Oct. 31, 2023 -
Breaking Through the Stained-Glass Ceiling? Case Studies on Female Catholicism and Its Transnational Developments Since the 1950s
May 16, 2023 -
The Church of Pius XII after World War II (1945-58). The relationes ad limina as Sources for Historiographical Reflection
Dec. 13, 2022 -
1 | 1 | 2022
April 29, 2022
Claus Arnold, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, Deutschland
Valentina Ciciliot, Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia
Giovanni Vian, Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia
Advisory Board
Alejandro M. Dieguez, Archivio Apostolico Vaticano
Enrico Galavotti, Università degli Studi «G. d’Annunzio» Chieti-Pescara, Italia
Gerd-Rainer Horn, SciencesPo, Paris, France
John Maiden, The Open University, UK
Charles Mercier, Université de Bordeaux, France
Laura Pettinaroli, Université Lumière Lyon 2, France
Eva Salerno, Institut Catholique de Paris (ISP-Faculté d’Education), France
Rafael Serrano García, Universidad de Valladolid, España
Klaus Unterburger, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Deutschland
Editorial Board
Enrico Baruzzo, Università degli Studi di Padova, Italia
Patrizia Luciani, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italia
Saretta Marotta, Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia
Daiana Menti, Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia
Ivan Portelli, Istituto di Storia Sociale e Religiosa, Gorizia, Italia
Francesco Tacchi, Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia
Carlo Urbani, Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti, Venezia, Italia
Managing Editor
Federica Ferrarin, Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia
Ca’ Foscari University of Venice
Department of Humanities
Malcanton Marcorà
Dorsoduro 3848/D
30123 Venice
jomacc_editor@unive.it
Use the form to submit a proposal.
Submit a proposalinput
The article processing charges are regulated by the Publisher. For more information please visit: Publish with us.
Every article published by ECF was accepted for publication by no less than two qualified reviewers as a result of a process of anonymous reviewing (double-blind peer review). The reviewers are independent of the authors and not affiliated with the same institution.
The Journal’s Editor-in-Chief guarantees the proper execution of the peer review process for every article published in the Journal.
Peer review policies for the different sections:
- Complete volume/issue: subject to peer review
- Monographs/essays/articles: subject to peer review
- Introductions, prefaces: no peer review
- Reviews: no peer review
- Editorials: no peer review
For a complete description of the process, please visit: Scientific certification.
This handbook outlines the main editorial conventions adopted in the journal. For special cases and further guidance (such as the list of permissible abbreviations), please refer to the Edizioni Ca' Foscari Editorial Guidelines: https://edizionicafoscari.unive.it/media/pdf/pubblicare-con-noi/ecf_norme_en.pdf.pdf
I. Document Composition
For each document provide at least 5 keywords relating to the main topics of the article, along with an abstract (not exceeding 650 characters, spaces included). Please note that, in the abstract, bibliographic references should not be included. Do not use the first person.
The Main Text can be divided into titled sections and subsections (with additional levels, if necessary), which are numbered and titled. The text should begin with an Introduction section (number 1) and end with a Conclusions section. Please ensure that all text portions are numbered.
Use a font that includes the full Unicode range (e.g. Times New Roman, Calibri, Aptos or equivalent), with a body size of 12 in the main text (10 in footnotes).
Small caps, special styles, and line spacing other than 1 are excluded. Boldface is allowed for titles.
Dates, Numbers and Measure System
Numbers should be provided in abbreviated form omitting the parts that do not change (except for the so-called 'teens' 11-19).
E.g.: 1960-65; 270-1; 256-70; 311-14; 1,000; 120 × 240 cm; 5 March-7 May; Eighteenth century; 1930s.
Quotations in the Main Text
- Quotations counting less than 10 words should be included in the main text and enclosed in double inverted commas ( “…”). The verses are separated by a vertical bar ( | ).
- Quotations that are longer than 10 words must:
- NOT be enclosed in quotation marks,
- detached from the body and preceded and followed by a blank line,
- indented 1 cm from the left with respect to the main body of the text;
- end with a full stop;
- If the quotation contains other quotations, double inverted commas and single inverted commas should be used (e.g.: “as the Apostle teaches us: ‘There is one body and one Spirit’”).
- Quotations from primary sources must be in the original language. Translation, if any, may be given in footnotes. If quotations are translated by the author, this should be indicated at the first occurrence.
- Deliberate omissions in the body of the citation are marked with ‘[...]’. Gaps already present in the text from which you are quoting are marked with ‘<...>’.
Foreign Words and Translations
The translation must be given in regular, within round brackets placed immediately after the foreign word: e.g. Alltagsgeschichte (microhistory).
Emphasis
High inverted commas (‘...’) may be used to highlight a ‘concept’, to dwell on the precise meaning of a ‘term’, to signal the ‘idiomatic’, ‘metaphorical’ or ‘improper’ use of a lemma.
II. Bibliography
Each document is followed by a final bibliography, ordered alphabetically. The bibliography must contain all texts cited in the footnotes.
Distinguish between Archival Sources (if any) and then Printed Sources (if any) and Bibliography.
The bibliographic reference system adopted by JoMaCC is Author, Shortened Title (cf. § 4.2 e § 5 in Edizioni Ca' Foscari Editorial Guidelines).
In this system, bibliographical references are included in the footnotes and not in the body of the text. The shortened form of the title must provide the necessary information to unambiguously identify the complete form in the final bibliography.
Author’s Last Name, Title in italics (shortened title if longer than four words), page number(s), if any.
In the bibliography:
- Rossi, M. La stesura di norme sull’impiego dell’idrogeno. Venezia: Edizioni Aperte, 1987.
- Rossi, M.; Bianchi, T. (a cura di). La nostra opera. Venezia: Edizioni Aperte, 1990.
In footnotes:
- Rossi, La stesura di norme, 35-6; Rossi, Bianchi, La nostra opera.
Author’s Last Name, “Title”, page number(s), if any.
In the bibliography:
- Bianchi, F. “Il Gotico. Racconti e miti”. Letteratura inglese, 6(2), 2017, 15-34.
- Harsey, S.; Freyd, F.J. “Deny, Attack, and Reverse Victim and Offender (DARVO): What is the Influence on Perceived Perpetrator and Victim Credibility?”. Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment & Trauma, 29(8), 2020, 897-916. https://doi.org/10.1080/10926771.2020.1774695.
In footnotes:
- Bianchi, “Il Gotico. Racconti e miti”, 17.
- Casanova, “La pena di morte”.
In the bibliography:
- S. Congregatio Consistorialis. “De relationibus dioecesanis”. Acta Apostolicae Sedis (AAS), 10, 1918, 500-15.
- S. Congregatio Consistorialis. “Titolo”. AAS, 10, 1918, 515-30.
In footnotes:
- S. Congregatio Consistorialis, “De relationibus dioecesanis”.
Author’s Last Name, “Title”, page number(s), if any.
In the bibliography:
- Bianchi, F. “Storie e miti del Gotico italiano”. Ricci, L. (a cura di), Il Gotico nel diciannovesimo secolo, vol. 2. Venezia: Edizioni Aperte, 2016, 87-121.
In footnotes:
- Bianchi, “Storie e miti del Gotico italiano”.
Title in italics (shortened if it consists of more than four words), and the corresponding page number, if applicable.
In the bibliography:
- Nuove risorse. Milano: Open Edition, 2000.
In footnotes:
- Nuove risorse, 110-15.
Please note: the following abbreviations must not be used: Ivi, Ibid., Ibidem, Id., Ead., op. cit. etc. Each reference, even if recurring several times, must always be repeated.
Archive Quotations
To cite an archival source,
- in the bibliography: state the archive and the fond, or alternatively the box and/or folder, if the source is extensive;
- in footnotes observe the following order: document, in archive (acronym), fonds, box, folder.
In Archival Sources:
- Catholic University of America Archives (CUAA), National Conference of Catholic Bishops, Ad Hoc Committee: Catholic Charismatic Renewal 1969-1979.
In footnotes:
- Letter from Alexander Carter to Edward O’Connor, 2 January 1970, in CUAA, National Conference of Catholic Bishops, Ad Hoc Committee: Catholic Charismatic Renewal 1969-1979, Box 120, folder NCCB: Ad Hoc Committee: Catholic Charismatic Renewal 1969-1971.
In Archival Sources:
- Archivio Apostolico Vaticano (AAV), Archivio Particolare Pio X, b. 116.
In footnotes:
- Lemius a Pio X, undated (January 1914), in AAV, Archivio Particolare Pio X, b. 116, ff. 1022r-1023v.
In the bibliography:
- Giovanni Paolo II. Costituzione apostolica Pastor Bonus. 1988. https://www.vatican.va/content/john-paul-ii/it/apost_constitutions/documents/hf_jp-ii_apc_19880628_pastor-bonus-index.html.
In foonotes:
- Giovanni Paolo II, Costituzione Apostolica Pastor Bonus, art. 149.
Common archival abbreviations
To cite an archival source, list, in order, the acronym of the archive, the fond and possibly also the archival unit (box/unit, etc.) if large. In footnotes, indicate: document, followed by “in” and the full name of the archive, fond, archival unit (box/unit, etc.), archival subunit (file / folder etc.), sheet or page if the document consists of several pages.
JoMaCC. Journal of Modern and Contemporary Christianity
1/2026
North America. A Mission Landscape (1820s-1910s)
Editor: Valentina Ciciliot (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, Italy)
Guest editors: Claudio Ferlan (Italian-German Historical Institute, FBK, Italy)
In the 19th and early 20th centuries, the spread of the Christian faith experienced a new upswing in which all denominations – Catholics, Protestants and Orthodox – were involved. It was rightly described as a missionary century: the definition comes from a pioneer of missiology, Gustav Warneck (1834-1910), while Kenneth Scott Latourette (1884-1968) speaks of the great century of Christian missions
One of the places that marked this change was North America, where the missionary zeal of representatives of various Christian denominations, both women and men, materialized in a variety of ways. The specificity of missionary work in this country was characterized by a multifaceted activity carried out among emigrants, settlers, and members of the US Army on the one hand, and among the indigenous peoples on the other. For this reason, the situation required a constant confrontation between different religious and material cultures.
The purpose of this call for articles is to gather contributions that will deepen the understanding of these multifaceted efforts and consider the diversity of missionary activities of Catholics and Protestants, men and women, organized and unorganized, both within American society (towns, wagon trains, pioneers, mines, workplaces) and within the native population.
Possible topics:
- Christian missions
- Religious Orders, Congregations and Confraternities
- Schools, Catechism
- Missionary literature
- Women’s voices
- Native population’s perspective
Proposal submission deadline
December 31st, 2024 (Authors may submit an abstract or extended abstract in English)
Notification of acceptance
January 2025
Submission deadline for final and complete articles
January 15th, 2026
Articles should be written in English and range between approx. 30,000-50,000 characters (space included). The instructions for authors can be consulted on the journal’s website: Editorial Guidelines (Section 4.2 Author, title).
Submitted articles must be suitable for blind review. Each submission should include a brief abstract of no more than 650 words, five keywords for indexing purposes, and a bibliography.
For any questions, please use the following address: jomacc_editor@unive.it; vciciliot@unive.it.
Bibliography
Clarke, E.S. (2020). “The Sisters of Our Lady of the Snows: An Indigenous, Alaskan Sisterhood”. American Catholic Studies, 131(3), 57-91.
Fleck, M. (2024). “Sisters of Providence: Their Arrival and Adaptations to the Pacific Northwest”. Oregon Historical Quarterly, 125(2), 134-56.
Martin, J. W.; Mark, A.N. (eds) (2014). Native Americans, Christianity, and the Reshaping of the American Religious Landscape. Chapel Hill, NC: North Carolina Scholarship Online.
McKevitt, G. (2007). Brokers of Culture: Italian Jesuits in the American West, 1848–1919. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
O’Donnell, C. (2020). Jesuits in the North American Colonies and the United States: Faith, Conflict, Adaptation. Leiden: Brill.
Joyeux, M.; Robinaud, M. (eds) (2023). “Missions catholiques féminines en contexte colonial et post-colonial”. Archives de sciences sociales des religions, 202, 2.
Go to the upload area to submit your proposal
https://peerflow.edizionicafoscari.it/abstracts/form/journal/29/343
Ethical Code of the Journal of Modern and Contemporary Christianity
The Journal of Modern and Contemporary Christianity is a peer-reviewed scientific journal whose policy is inspired by the COPE (Committee on Publication Ethics) Ethical Code. See the Best Practice Guidelines for Journal Editors.
Publisher’s responsibilities
The Publisher must provide the Journal with adequate resources and the guidance of experts, in order to carry out its role in the most professional way, aiming at the highest quality standard.
The Publisher must have a written agreement that defines the relationship with the owner of the Journal and/or the Editor-in-Chief. The agreement must comply with the Code of Behavior for Publishers of Scientific Journals, as established by COPE.
The relationship among the Editor-in-Chief, the Advisory Board and the Publisher is based on the principle of publishing independence.
Editors’ responsibilities
The Editor-in-Chief and the Advisory Board of the Journal of Modern and Contemporary Christianity alone are responsible for the decision to publish the articles submitted.
Submitted articles, after having been checked for plagiarism by means of the anti-plagiarism software Compilatio that is used by the University and is made available to us, will be sent to at least two reviewers. Final acceptance presumes the implementation of possible amendments, as required by the reviewers and under the supervision of the Journal of Modern and Contemporary Christianity Editor-in-Chief.
The Journal of Modern and Contemporary Christianity Editor-in-Chief and Advisory Board must evaluate each submitted paper in compliance with the Journalʼs policy, i.e. exclusively on the basis of its scientific content, without discrimination of race, sex, gender, creed, ethnic origin, citizenship, or the scientific, academic and political position of the Authors.
Allegations of misconduct
If the Journal of Modern and Contemporary Christianity Editor-in-Chief and Advisory Board notice (or receive notifications of) mistakes or inaccuracies, conflict of interest or plagiarism in a published article, they will immediately warn the Author and the Publisher and will undertake the necessary actions to resolve the issue. They will do their best to correct the published content whenever they are informed that it contains scientific errors or that the authors have committed unethical or illegal acts in connection with their published work. If necessary, they will withdraw the article or publish a recantation.
All complaints are handled in accordance with the guidelines published by the COPE.
Concerns and complaints must be addressed to the following e-mail ecf_support@unive.it. The letter should contain the following information:
- complainant’s personal information;
- title, author(s), publication date, DOI;
- complaint(s);
- declaration that the complainant has no conflict of interest, or declaration of an actual or potential conflict of interest.
Authors’ responsibilities
Stylesheet
Authors must follow the Guidelines for Authors to be downloaded from the Journal of Modern and Contemporary Christianity website.
Authors must explicitly state that their work is original in all its parts and that the submitted paper has not been previously published, nor submitted to other journals, until the entire evaluation process is completed. Since no paper gets published without significant revision, earlier dissemination in conference proceedings or working papers does not preclude consideration for publication, but Authors are expected to fully disclose publication/dissemination of the material in other closely related publications, so that the overlap can be evaluated by the Journal of Modern and Contemporary Christianity Editor-in-Chief.
Authorship
Authors are strongly encouraged to use their ORCID iD when submitting a manuscript. This will ensure the authors’ visibility and correct citation of their work.
Authorship must be correctly attributed; all those who have given a substantial contribution to the design, organisation and accomplishment of the research the article is based on, must be indicated as Co-Authors. Please ensure that: the order of the author names is correct; the names of all authors are present and correctly spelled, and that affiliations are up-to-date.
The respective roles of each co-author should be described in a footnote. The statement that all authors have approved the final version should be included in the disclosure.
Conflicts of interest and financing
Authors, under their own responsibility, must avoid any conflict of interest affecting the results obtained or the interpretations suggested. The Journal of Modern and Contemporary Christianity Editor-in-Chief will give serious and careful consideration to suggestions of cases in which, due to possible conflict of interest, an Author’s work should not be reviewed by a specific scholar. Authors should indicate any financing agency or the project the article stems from.
Quotations
Authors must see to it that all works consulted be properly quoted. If works or words of others are used, they have to be properly paraphrased or duly quoted. Quotations between “double quotes” (or «angled quotation marks» if the text is written in a language other than English) must reproduce the exact wording of the source; under their own responsibility, Authors should carefully refrain from disguising a restyling of the source’s wording, as though it was the original formulation.
Any form of excessive, inappropriate or unnecessary self-citation, as well as any other form of citation manipulation, are strongly discouraged.
Ethical Committee
Whenever required, the research protocols must be authorised in advance by the Ethical Committee of Ca’ Foscari University of Venice.
Emendations
When Authors find a mistake or an inaccuracy in their own article, they must immediately warn the Journal of Modern and Contemporary Christianity Editor-in-Chief, providing all the information needed to make the due adjustments.
Reviewers’ responsibilities
Goal
By means of the peer-review procedure, reviewers assist the Journal of Modern and Contemporary Christianity Editor-in-Chief and Advisory Board in taking decisions on the articles submitted. They are expected to offer the Authors suggestions as to possible adjustments aimed at improving their contribution submission.
Timing and conflicts of interest
If a reviewer does not feel up to the task of doing a given review, or if she/he is unable to read the work within the agreed schedule, she/he should notify the Journal of Modern and Contemporary Christianity Editor-in-Chief. Reviewers must not accept articles for which there is a conflict of interest due to previous contributions or to a competition with a disclosed author (or with an author they believe to have identified).
Confidentiality
The content of the reviewed work must be considered confidential and must not be used without explicit authorisation by the Author, who is to be contacted via the editor-in-chief. Any confidential information obtained during the peer review process should not be used for other purposes.
Collaborative attitude
Reviewers should see themselves not as adversaries but as advocates for the field. Any comment must be done in a collaborative way and from an objective point of view. Reviewers should clearly motivate their comments and keep in mind the Golden Rule of Reviewing: “Review for others as you would have others review for you”.
Plagiarism
Reviewers should report any similarity or overlapping of the work under analysis with other works known to them.