ABAS will be also included in EBSCO host, ProQuest, and J-STAGE.
About ABAS: Annals of Business Administrative Science
ABAS is an English-language, open-access online journal that communicates the results of business research conducted in Japan to overseas researchers. It is of course a refereed journal. ABAS is the first Japanese business studies journal to be archived on the international EBSCO host and ProQuest research databases. ABAS was founded in 2002, and is published by GBRC, a non-profit organization established primarily by interested members of the teaching staff of Department of Management, Graduate School of Economics of the University of Tokyo.
Ten years after its foundation, ABAS was re-launched from Volume 11 in a new form. The new version was clearly distinguished from conventional national and international social science journals, adopting a completely new and different "ABAS style" to publish distinctive, stylish papers in the aim of becoming a frequently cited journal. This is the ABAS editorial policy.
What is ABAS style?
Each paper focuses on a single theory, data set, and concept, with a clear and simple theme.
The paperfs title and abstract are explanatory, enabling readers to immediately understand its theme and assertions.
Each paper is compact, aiming for a length of 10-15 pages so that it can be read in a single sitting.
English is used as a common global language, and the language is simple enough to be readily understood by non-native readers of English.
Advanced mathematical or statistical methods are not used.
ABAS places particular emphasis on the following three types of paper, which have been neglected by conventional journals, but which readers wish to read:
Technical notes: Clarifying mistakes and problems in existing research.
Fact-finding reports: Setting out interesting facts obtained from research data.
Conceptual papers: Introducing and explaining interesting conceptual models developed either by the author or others.
Sato, H., & Fujimoto, T. (2013).
New product development in financial industries:
Media tangibility and media durability of financial products. Annals of Business Administrative Science, 12, 63-70.
doi: 10.7880/abas.12.63 (forthcoming). Download (Available online January 6, 2013)
Kim, H. (2013).
Local engineers as knowledge liaison:
How Denso India succeed in developing wiper-system for Tata Nano. Annals of Business Administrative Science, 12, 45-62.
doi: 10.7880/abas.12.45 (forthcoming). Download (Available online December 23, 2012)
Kuwashima, K. (2013).
Followers of Harvard Study:
A review of product development research 1990s-2000s. Annals of Business Administrative Science, 12, 31-44.
doi: 10.7880/abas.12.31 (forthcoming). Download (Available online December 9, 2012)
Inamizu, N., & Wakabayashi, T. (2013).
A dynamic view of industrial agglomeration: Toward an integration of Marshallian and Weberian theories. Annals of Business Administrative Science, 12, 13-29.
doi: 10.7880/abas.12.13 (forthcoming). Download (Available online November 25, 2012)
Takahashi, N., Shintaku, J., & Ohkawa, H. (2013).
Is technological trajectory disruptive? Annals of Business Administrative Science, 12, 1-12.
doi: 10.7880/abas.12.1 (forthcoming). Download (Available online November 11, 2012)
Oki, K. (2012).
A Japanese factory in Thailand:
Seeking acceptance of kaizen activities. Annals of Business Administrative Science, 11, 55-63.
doi: 10.7880/abas.11.55
Download (Available online October 28, 2012)
Sato, H. (2012).
Routine-based view of organizational learning and mechanisms of myopia. Annals of Business Administrative Science, 11, 45-54.
doi: 10.7880/abas.11.45
Download (Available online October 14, 2012)
Fujimoto, T. (2012).
Evolution theory of production systems. Annals of Business Administrative Science, 11, 25-44.
doi: 10.7880/abas.11.25
Download (Available online September 25, 2012)
Kuwashima, K. (2012).
Product development research cycle: A historical review 1960s-1980s. Annals of Business Administrative Science, 11, 11-23.
doi: 10.7880/abas.11.11
Download (Available online September 25, 2012)
Takahashi, N., & Inamizu, N. (2012).
Mysteries of NIH syndrome. Annals of Business Administrative Science, 11, 1-10.
doi: 10.7880/abas.11.1
Download (Available online September 25, 2012)
Copyright (C) 2002-2012
Global Business Research Center (GBRC). All rights reserved.
Editorial Office: MERC, University of Tokyo. Kojima Hall, Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, JAPAN.
ABAS will be also included in EBSCO host, ProQuest, and J-STAGE.