来自临时联合编辑

IF 1.1 3区 社会学 Q2 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
J. Hall, Laura R. Peck
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It is for that reason that he established, for example, the Experimental Methodology Section (which Laura edits) and the Economic Evaluation Section (which Brooks Bowden edits); and that he reconceptualized the Ethics, Values and Culture Section (formerly known as professional values and ethics, which Jill Anne Chouinard and Fiona Cram edit). He diversified the journal’s editorial team to ensure global representation of the many varied parts of our field, as represented by the inclusion of the International Developments Section (which Deborah Rugg and Zenda Ofir edit) and the appointment of Apollo Nkwake as an Associate Editor to bring more attention to evaluation scholars and practitioners in the Global South. George maintained the Method Note (which Tarek Azzam and Dana Wanzer edit), Teaching and Learning (which Anne Vo and Phung Pham edit), and Book Review (which Leslie Cooksy edits) Sections as having ongoing importance. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

在《美国评估杂志》(AJE)总编辑乔治·朱尔斯不幸去世后,我们两人——乔里·霍尔和劳拉·佩克——同意介入并担任临时联合总编辑,而美国评估协会(AEA)则为我们的杂志找到了一个新的、永久的领导。我们非常感谢George和Rachael Lawrence, AJE最近的总编辑,他们引导了本期的六篇文章和教学笔记的出版过程。这些文章反映了项目评估领域的多样性,关注了反事实的概念(Reichardt)、评估政策(Kinarsky & Christie)、评估中的项目剂量(Hewawitharana等人)、政策倡导(Albert等人)、评估能力(Hudib & Cousins)、定性数据收集和分析(LaChenaye & McCarthy)以及评估能力(montrose - moorhead等人)。此外,这一期还提供了一个“纪念”部分,专门介绍和反思乔治·朱尔斯的学术生活。根据我们与乔治的经验,我们相信他是我们期刊的杰出编辑,因为他对推动项目评估领域的界限充满热情。他真正重视在我们的领域中运作的方法和观点的多样性,并致力于确保所有这些方法和观点在我们的期刊上获得关注。正是出于这个原因,他建立了实验方法论组(劳拉编辑)和经济评估组(布鲁克斯·鲍登编辑);他重新定义了道德、价值观和文化部分(以前称为职业价值观和道德,由吉尔·安妮·乔纳德和菲奥娜·克拉姆编辑)。他使杂志的编辑团队多样化,以确保我们领域的许多不同部分的全球代表性,包括国际发展部分(由Deborah Rugg和Zenda Ofir编辑),并任命Apollo Nkwake为副主编,以引起对全球南方评估学者和实践者的更多关注。乔治认为方法说明(Tarek Azzam和Dana Wanzer编辑),教学和学习(Anne Vo和Phung Pham编辑)和书评(Leslie Cooksy编辑)部分具有持续的重要性。除了Jori, Leah Neubauer, Gregory Phillips, II和Justus Randolph也担任了George的副编辑,我们非常感谢他们在这一过渡期间继续为我们服务。在他的第一个“来自编辑”的注释中,开始了第40卷,乔治陈述了他对杂志的期望。他希望AJE成为“(1)为评估界成员提供最重要和最相关信息的主要来源;(2)在影响评估界的政策讨论中代表评估人员的专业知识和价值观的有影响力的声音”(2019年6月,158)。这是我们的希望——在我们作为临时联合主编的时间里——我们保持和推进乔治的愿景。乔治最近的学术家,新墨西哥大学公共事务学院,在他们对他的生活和工作的反思中很好地说明了这一点。他们注意到乔治“从不寻求强加教条或方法论。”相反,他提倡无论做什么都要做好。乔治相信
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
From the Interim Co-Editors
After the untimely passing of the American Journal of Evaluation’s (AJE’s) Editor-in-Chief, George Julnes, the two of us—Jori Hall and Laura Peck—agreed to step in and serve as Interim Co-Editors-in-Chief while the American Evaluation Association (AEA) secured a new, permanent lead for our journal. We are grateful to George and Rachael Lawrence, AJE’s most recent Managing Editor, for ushering through the publication process of the six articles and the teaching note that appear in this issue. The articles reflect the diversity of the field of program evaluation with attention to the concept of the counterfactual (Reichardt), evaluation policy (Kinarsky & Christie), program dosage in evaluation (Hewawitharana et al.), policy advocacy (Albert et al.), evaluation capacity (Hudib & Cousins), qualitative data collection and analysis (LaChenaye & McCarthy), and evaluation competencies (Montrosse-Moorhead et al.). In addition, this issue presents an “In Memoriam” section, dedicated to and reflecting on the scholarly life of George Julnes. In our experiences with George, we believed him to be an exceptional editor for our journal because of his passion for pushing the boundaries of the field of program evaluation. He truly valued the diversity of approaches and perspectives that operate in our field and aimed to ensure that all of those approaches and perspectives earned attention in our journal. It is for that reason that he established, for example, the Experimental Methodology Section (which Laura edits) and the Economic Evaluation Section (which Brooks Bowden edits); and that he reconceptualized the Ethics, Values and Culture Section (formerly known as professional values and ethics, which Jill Anne Chouinard and Fiona Cram edit). He diversified the journal’s editorial team to ensure global representation of the many varied parts of our field, as represented by the inclusion of the International Developments Section (which Deborah Rugg and Zenda Ofir edit) and the appointment of Apollo Nkwake as an Associate Editor to bring more attention to evaluation scholars and practitioners in the Global South. George maintained the Method Note (which Tarek Azzam and Dana Wanzer edit), Teaching and Learning (which Anne Vo and Phung Pham edit), and Book Review (which Leslie Cooksy edits) Sections as having ongoing importance. In addition to Jori, Leah Neubauer, Gregory Phillips, II and Justus Randolph served as Associate Editors with George, and we have been grateful for their continued service during this transition. Upon his first “From the Editor” note, kicking off volume 40, George stated his aspirations for the journal. He desired AJE to be “(1) a top source for the most important and relevant information for members of the evaluation community and (2) an influential voice representing the expertise and values of evaluators in policy discussions that affect the evaluation community” (Julnes 2019, 158). It is our hope—during our time as Interim Co-Editors-in-Chief—that we maintain and advance George’s vision. George’s most recent academic home, the University of New Mexico’s School of Public Affairs, stated it well in their reflection on his life and work. They noted that George “never sought to impose dogma or methodology.” Instead, he advanced being good in whatever you do. George believed that
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来源期刊
American Journal of Evaluation
American Journal of Evaluation SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
11.80%
发文量
39
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Evaluation (AJE) publishes original papers about the methods, theory, practice, and findings of evaluation. The general goal of AJE is to present the best work in and about evaluation, in order to improve the knowledge base and practice of its readers. Because the field of evaluation is diverse, with different intellectual traditions, approaches to practice, and domains of application, the papers published in AJE will reflect this diversity. Nevertheless, preference is given to papers that are likely to be of interest to a wide range of evaluators and that are written to be accessible to most readers.
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