The Global Encyclopaedia of Informality
Edited by Professor Alena V. Ledeneva and International Board
University College London School of Slavonic and East European Studies
About the Encyclopaedia
The Global Encyclopaedia of Informality is an interdisciplinary research project led by 香港六合彩中特网 School of Slavonic and East European Studies. It will provide the first multimedia online resource that explores informal practices and structures from a global perspective. Through its comparative and ethnographic investigations, the encyclopaedia will explore the existence of multiple moralities, which account for the resilience of informal practices, and explore their legitimacy and institutional arrangements as well as the cultural and historical contexts of informality. The project will create an online resource overseen by 香港六合彩中特网鈥檚 Information Studies/Centre for Digital Humanities to unite scholars of informality all over the world, and importantly to provide a platform for the submission and curation of informal practises across the globe. It will be a comprehensible, easily accessible resource targeting not only the academic community, but also policy makers, businesses and the public.
A print version of selected entries is also planned, with preliminary interest from Cambridge University Press as part of its FP7 ANTICORRP series of publications. The print version will focus on exploring the boundaries between informality and corruption, including the ambivalences of informal practices and their major implications for anti-corruption policy.
Contributing to the Encyclopaedia
The encyclopaedia is based on authored entries of approximately 1,000-1,500 words. We are looking for contributors who have done primary, if not pioneering research of aspects of informality. If you are interested in contributing or would like to suggest concepts for inclusions, please contact Project Manager Dr Anna Bailey at informality2014@gmail.com
Guidelines for Entries
Entries should be around 1,000-1,500 words including bibliography. Each entry will focus on a single practice (preferably named in colloquial way) and analyse at least some of the following aspects:
- 聽Name of the informal practice;
- 聽Definition, etymology and its translation into other languages;
- 聽How widely is it used?;
- 聽In which countries/regions/sectors is it spread?;
- 聽Identify analogous practices, named differently in different countries (if possible);
- How does it relate to other informal practices (discuss similarities and differences if possible);
- What are the implications of the chosen practice for politics/economy/ society?;
- Which method was or can be used for researching this practice?;
- Give examples of the practice;
- How can the practice be measured?
- Please cross-reference and recommend readings.
Style
- Entries should be written in British English
- Avoid use of the first person pronoun
- Use simple and straightforward language
- 聽Entries should be aimed at a non-specialist audience, including non-academics
Format
- 聽Entries should be single-spaced, ideally in Calibri font, point 12.
- Non-English words, including the name of the practice, should appear in italics.
- Referencing should appear in parentheses in the text, in the form (Surname Year: page number(s)), e.g. (Smith 2014: 31-5). Please do not put a comma between the author and the year.
- All references in the text should be included in the bibliography/recommended reading
- Please list the name of the practice, author鈥檚 name and institution at the top of the document, in the exact format you wish it to appear, e.g.:
Name of practice: blat Author name: Alena V. Ledeneva Institution: School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College London
- Name of practice: blat
- Author name: Alena V. Ledeneva
- Institution: School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College London
We are using Cambridge University Press鈥檚 standard format for referencing and bibliography. Please follow the following formats:
Books
Rupp, Katherine. 2004. Gift Giving in Japan: Cash, Connections, Cosmologies. Stanford: Stanford University Press
Blundo, G. and Le Meur, P. Y. (eds.) 2009. The Governance of Daily Life in Africa: Ethnographic Explorations of Public and Collective Services. Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers
Padgett, J., Bonacich, P., Skvoretz, J. and Scott, J. 2000. Social Network Analysis. London: Sage
Chapters from edited collections
Bourdieu, P. 1986. 鈥楾he forms of capital鈥, in J. G. Richardson (ed.), Handbook of Theory and Research for the Sociology of Education. New York: Greenwood Press: 241-58
Journal Articles
Lebra, Takie Sugiyama. 1975. 鈥楢n Alternative Approach to Reciprocity鈥, American Anthropologist, 77: 550-6
News articles
Kuzmin, Vladimir. 2011. 鈥楤y October 1, government officials will leave the boards of state-run companies鈥, Rossiyskaya Gazeta, 4 April: 3
Novaya gazeta. 2010. 鈥楢 bil li uchreditel鈥?鈥, No. 74, 12 July: 6
RIA Novosti. 2010. 鈥楴othing can make nation drink less, say quarter of Russians鈥, 17 March
Internet-based sources
Petrov, Thomas. 2012. 鈥楾he secret of the wine cellar鈥, Rumafia.com, 4 May
UNDP. 2004. Practice Code: Anti-corruption,
Multiple works from the same author and year
Please differentiate by adding a letter after the year of publication, starting with 鈥渁鈥. For example:
Ballard, R. 2005a. 鈥楥oalitions of reciprocity and the maintenance of financial integrity within informal value transmission systems: The operational dynamics of contemporary hawala networks鈥, Journal of Banking Regulation, 6 (4): 319鈥352
Ballard, R. 2005b. 鈥楻emittances and economic development in India and Pakistan鈥, in S. Maimbo and D. Ratha (eds.), Remittances: Development Impact and Future Prospects. Washington, D.C.: World Bank
Non-English language sources
There is no need to provide translations of the titles of non-English sources. Please transliterate any non-Latin scripts into Latin letters, e.g.:
Korzhikhina, T. P. 1992. Administrativno-komandnaya sistema upravleniia. Moscow: RGGU
Kulikov, V. 2005. 鈥楾elefonnoe pravo podsudno鈥, Rossiiskaya gazeta, 6 September,