North American Journal of Psychology
How to submit a paper to NAJP
North American Journal of Psychology (ISSN 1527-7143) publishes scientific papers that are of general interest to psychologists and other social scientists. Papers may encompass a wide variety of topics, methods, and strategies. Although the home office is located in North America , submissions are welcome from all parts of the globe. We encourage you to have a peer read your paper before submission. We promise to mail a decision on your paper within an average of 6 weeks after we receive it. If accepted, we promise to publish it within an average of 4 months after we receive a final acceptable version.
Submit 1 paper copy of each manuscript prepared according to APA guidelines, and 1 copy as an e-mail attachment. If the final version of your paper is accepted, you will be asked to send a diskette with your manuscript (or, better yet, e-mail the revised version to najp@embarqmail.com).
If your paper is accepted, please send a check (in U.S. dollars and drawn on a U.S. bank) or purchase order for the amount specified with your final draft (billed at $25 per typeset page in units of 2 pages). You may also pay through PayPal, but there is an additional charge of 3.2%. If you use PayPal please send me the e-mail address of the person who will be requested by PayPal to pay. Submission of a manuscript to NAJP is a contract to publish with NAJP if your paper is accepted. Because of our fast editorial feedback, simultaneous submission to other journals is not allowed.
Send manuscripts to Dr. Lynn McCutcheon , Editor, North American Journal of Psychology, 240 Harbor Drive , Winter Garden , FL 34787 .
It is our belief that many good scientific papers are rejected for invalid reasons. Some journals reject up to 90% of their submissions because they don't have space. Furthermore, studies of the review process strongly suggest that not all of the lucky 10% are better papers than those that get rejected. In our view, many of those rejected papers are meritorious. Some have problems with writing, format, or misuse of statistics that can be corrected with constructive criticism and a little work on the part of the authors.

