STM and business publisher Inderscience, Switzerland, recently published the first issues of four new titles. The new journals are: International Journal of Aviation Management, International Journal of Mechatronics and Automation, International Journal of Space-Based and Situated Computing and International Journal of Transitions and Innovation Systems.
Edited by Prof. Andreas Wald of the European Business School Paris, the International Journal of Aviation Management addresses major management issues facing the air transport industry today. It offers practitioners and academics a forum for analysis and discussion in the field of aviation management. Papers cover all the major sectors of the industry - airlines, airports, air traffic control and related organisations. A free download of the papers from the issue is available online at http://www.inderscience.com/sample.php?id=289.
The International Journal of Mechatronics and Automation is edited by Prof. Shuxiang Guo of the Kagawa University, Japan. The journal reports the latest developments from interdisciplinary theoretical studies, computational algorithm development and practical applications and particularly welcomes those emerging methodologies and techniques which bridge theoretical studies and applications and have significant potential for real-world applications. A free download of the papers from the issue is available online at http://www.inderscience.com/sample.php?id=375.
The International Journal of Space-Based and Situated Computing is edited by Prof Fatos Xhafa of the Technical University of Catalonia, Spain. The journal's coverage extends the pervasive computing vision of everyday objects communicating and collaborating to provide intelligent and context-aware information and services to users in larger geographical spaces. A free download of the papers from this issue is available at http://www.inderscience.com/sample.php?id=373.
Edited by Marina Dabic of the University of Zagreb, Croatia, the International Journal of Transitions and Innovation Systems covers the transition role of innovation systems for the community and has an emphasis on the implications that policy choices have on both the welfare of humans through the technology, and on the catch-up process in transition countries. This perspective acknowledges the complexity of the innovation system as an interface between technology and socio-economic processes operating in parallel over different space-time scales, as well as the reflexive characteristic of human systems. A free download of the papers from this issue is available at http://www.inderscience.com/sample.php?id=160
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