Proposed Special Issue
Launch a focused collection on emerging hepatology themes.
Journal at a Glance
ISSN: 2578-2371
DOI Prefix: 10.14302/issn.2578-2371
License: CC BY 4.0
Peer reviewed open access journal
Scope Alignment
Hepatology, splenology, hepatobiliary disorders, portal hypertension, liver transplantation, metabolic and autoimmune liver disease, imaging, and translational therapeutics. We prioritize validated clinical and mechanistic evidence.
Publishing Model
Open access, single blind peer review, and rapid publication after acceptance and production checks. Metadata validation and DOI registration are included.
JSLR welcomes proposals for special issues that highlight emerging areas in hepatology and splenic research. Special issues bring focused attention to fast moving topics and support collaborative clinical and translational communities.
- Working title and thematic focus
- Rationale and relevance to hepatology or splenology
- Proposed guest editors and affiliations
- Target audience and expected contribution
- Preliminary list of potential contributors
- Timeline for submissions and reviews
Clinical Value
Clear contribution to patient outcomes or translational insight.
Editorial Capacity
Qualified guest editors with relevant expertise.
Community Interest
Evidence of demand and contributor engagement.
Feasibility
Realistic timelines and review capacity.
- Define scope and thematic boundaries
- Recommend reviewers and manage peer review
- Ensure ethical compliance and reporting quality
- Provide an editorial summary upon completion
The JSLR editorial office supports special issue planning, reviewer coordination, and production workflows. Send proposals or questions to [email protected].
| Stage | Suggested Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Proposal Review | 2 to 3 weeks | Editorial evaluation and feedback |
| Call for Papers | 6 to 8 weeks | Outreach and author invitations |
| Peer Review | 6 to 10 weeks | Single blind review and revisions |
| Production | 3 to 4 weeks | Copyediting and DOI registration |
Can guest editors submit articles?
Yes, but their papers are handled by independent editors.
Are special issue APCs different?
Standard APCs apply, with membership discounts if eligible.
Can issues focus on clinical guidelines or trials?
Yes, clinically focused themes are welcome.
- Define the clinical or translational gap the special issue addresses.
- Provide a rationale for guest editor expertise and topic coverage.
- Specify anticipated article types and approximate submission volume.
- Outline peer review timelines and editorial decision workflows.
- Describe outreach plans to hepatology and gastroenterology communities.
- Identify data reporting standards required for submissions.
- Clarify whether cross disciplinary submissions are in scope.
- List any planned invited contributions or consortium partners.
- Provide proposed metrics for impact or clinical relevance.
- Describe data harmonization requirements for multicenter submissions.
- Specify expected submission window and targeted publication date.
- Note any patient safety or regulatory considerations for topic areas.
- Specify how guest editors will manage conflicts of interest.
- Outline plans for an editorial introduction or summary article.
- Describe collaboration with clinical societies or networks.
- Provide criteria for invited versus open submissions.
- Include data reporting checklists for multicenter studies.
- State plans for dissemination or webinar promotion.
- Provide anticipated geographic or population coverage.
- Describe integration with ongoing research consortia.
- Define expected peer reviewer pool and recruitment strategy.
- Describe data sharing expectations for special issue contributors.
- Specify interdisciplinary scope across hepatology, surgery, and radiology.
- Outline plan for patient safety or ethics oversight in invited topics.
- Provide expected timeline for revisions and final acceptance.
- Identify metrics for success such as citations or clinical adoption.
- State whether a preprint policy will be highlighted in the call.
- Include communication plan for targeted author outreach.
- Note if a conference partnership supports the special issue.
- Provide guidance on thematic keywords for submissions.
- Specify editorial support for data harmonization across cohorts.
JSLR is committed to rigorous, transparent publishing in hepatology and spleen research. We emphasize reproducible clinical methods, clear reporting of diagnostic criteria, and ethical compliance across all article types.
The editorial office supports authors, editors, and reviewers with clear guidance and responsive communication. For questions about scope or workflow, contact [email protected].
We encourage continuous improvement in reporting practices and share updates that help the community maintain high standards in hepatobiliary and gastrointestinal research.
Ready to Propose a Special Issue?
Share your special issue concept with the editorial office.