Tourism Geographic
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Tourism Geographic

TOURISM GEOGRAPHIES GUIDELINES FOR ACADEMIC PAPERS

(TG) Tables & Figures Must Be Self Explanatory — Why Do So Many Academics Not Do This?

A pet-peeve of one of the Editors-in-Chief of ‘Tourism Geographies’.

by R Boed

Maybe about a quarter of the papers that I receive have some degree of this problem, although in only about 10% is it significant enough that I need to send the paper back to the author(s) to fix it.

As long as I can remembers, the rule has been that the title or caption for a table, along with the footnotes, to a table or figure, should provide enough information so that a reader can determine what the table or figure is showing without having to look for additional information in the text of the article.

This means that all symbols and abbreviations need to be defined either in the table itself or in the notes under the table, and the title needs to be very clear. And this needs to be repeated separately for each table and figure in a paper.

I have often asked colleagues at my university about this when serving on graduate student committees. The vast majority have responded that yes, this is a rule that they know about. However, it is apparently not one that they always think about when advising students (until I mention it) or when writing their own papers.

To me, this should be right up there with the formal referencing of sources that have influenced and informed an academic paper. Well, OK, may be right after referencing sources…

— Alan

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Research and opinion articles from scholars based on their more academic research published in “Tourism Geographies: an International Journal of Tourism Space, Place and Environment”

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