International Journal of Medicinal Herbs and Food Security

Motivation for Medicinal Herbs and Food Security arose from concern about the difficulty for scientists and policy makers to keep up with the expanding volume of information published about the challenge of meeting human health, food and nutritional requirements while protecting environmental services. Hence, the Journal aims to provide readers with:

Strategic views of experts from a wide range of disciplinary perspectives on prospects for ensuring health, food, and renewable resources security, based on the best available science, in a clear and readable form for a wide audience, bridging the gap between biological, engineering, medicinal, social and environmental sciences.

  1. Reviews, opinions and debates that synthesize, extend and critique research approaches and findings from the rapidly growing body of original publications on Medicinal Herbs and/or Food Security.

Medicinal Herbs and Food Security aims to publish papers that contribute to better understanding of economic, social, biophysical, technological, practical, solutions and institutional drivers of current and future Medicinal Herbs and Food Security.

Medicinal Herbs and Food Security aims to stimulate debate that is rooted in strong science, has strong interdisciplinary connections, and recognizes tradeoffs that often occur as a result of reconciling competing objectives and outcomes that may differ depending on spatial and temporal scale.

While integration across academic disciplines is encouraged, papers on components of Medicinal Herbs and Food Security will also be considered if they address important constraints and have a broad inference space. The goal is to publish concise and timely reviews and synthesis articles about research on following elements of food security:

  • Availability (sufficient quantity and quality)
  • Access (affordability, functioning markets and policies)
  • Safety, Nutrition and Sanitation
  • Stability and Environment (resilience and ecosystem services)

Distinguishing features of Medicinal Herbs and Food Security content are: (a) issues that contain several papers that address specific, timely topics of importance to health and/or food security, (b) authors who are recognized authorities in their field, (c) a focus on food security challenges in an interdisciplinary manner and at national to global scales, (d) a focus on challenging current paradigms, seeking to provide out-of-the box thinking on global issues, and (e) focus on delivering the sustainable development goals (SDGs).

Given this focus, Medicinal Herbs and Food Security will be an invaluable source of information for researchers, lecturers, teachers, students, professionals, policy makers and the international media.

If you have an idea for a review or a Special Issue please submit a short proposal describing the issues to be covered and the substance behind the analysis to the Publishing Content Specialist Pamela Liang at p.liang@Journal.com

TYPES OF ARTICLE

Criteria for Papers for Medicinal Herbs and Food Security

Original research (the major product of this journal)

Addresses an issue related to science, agriculture, health, engineering, medicines, nutrition, social science, or the environment of relevance to food security as currently defined on the journal web site.

Preferably multidisciplinary and relatively non-technical so it is does not require deep disciplinary knowledge to understand (e.g., avoids complex econometrics or crop models).

Results that can be summarized in a few simple tables or figures. More detailed results may be included in supplementary materials.

Not country specific but covers multiple countries, a region, or the world. Papers on a large country that explores links to Medicinal Herbs and Food Security may be considered.

5500 word limit

Review papers

Addresses an issue related to science, agriculture, health, engineering, medicines, nutrition, social science, or the environment of relevance to Medicinal Herbs and Food Security as defined on the journal web site.

Preferably multidisciplinary and relatively non-technical so it is does not require deep disciplinary knowledge to understand.

Not country specific although exceptions may be made for very large countries on issues that effect Medicinal Herbs and Food Security, or for a review of a country experience that is highly relevant to other countries.

5500 word limit.

Perspectives

Addresses an emerging topic or debate on Medicinal Herbs and Food Security.

Various types

Builds on a major body of work in which the author has been involved, such as an international panel report, conference, or a major study

Questions conventional wisdom through an evidence-based approach

Outlines gaps in our knowledge and needed research.

Authored by a well-known authority on the subject

Relatively short-may be a maximum of 2500 words

Light and timely review, often by the Editors

Special issues

Requires a proposal with a one-page rationale for the issue, the names and bios of the guest editors, and the authors, titles and abstracts of proposed papers

Well-recognized guest editors with a good publication record

Topic of importance to Medicinal Herbs and Food Security with global or regional coverage

Papers may be reviews or original research as defined above

Maximum of 12 published papers per issue

5500 word limit per paper plus an overview of about 2500 words

If after reviewing these criteria you are interested in submitting an article to the journal, please send an abstract to the Editor-in-Chief.

Ethics in publishing

Please see our information pages on Ethics in publishing and Ethical guidelines for journal publication.