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International Journal of eSports Research (IJER)Open Access Journal

International Journal of eSports Research (IJER)

Sharon Andrews (University of Houston-Clear Lake), Caroline M. Crawford (University of Houston-Clear Lake, USA)
Published: Continuous Volume |Established: 2021 |Volume: 1
ISSN: 2691-9273|EISSN: 2691-9281|DOI: 10.4018/IJER
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MLA

Andrews, Sharonand Caroline M. Crawford. "International Journal of eSports Research (IJER)." (2021). Web. 29 Mar. 2024. doi:10.4018/IJER

APA

Andrews, S. & Crawford, C. M. (2021). International Journal of eSports Research (IJER). doi:10.4018/IJER

Chicago

Andrews, Sharonand Caroline M. Crawford. "International Journal of eSports Research (IJER)," (2021), accessed (March 29, 2024), doi:10.4018/IJER

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The International Journal of eSports Research (IJER) provides a forum for researchers and practitioners to share leading-edge knowledge in eSports. IJER is a peer-reviewed international journal devoted to the theoretical and empirical understanding of current research, advances, and practices within the electronic online competitive gaming environment of eSports. The journal is interdisciplinary and publishes research from fields and disciplines that interact and surround eSports such as gaming, usability, game development, event planning, hospitality, education, psychology, sociology, cultural sciences, counseling, social work, literacy, accounting, economics, finance, communications, media, networking, computer information systems, and other disciplines that touch upon aspects of eSports. The journal publishes critical qualitative, quantitative, theoretical and empirical manuscripts that may include research studies, meta-analyses, case studies, theoretical and conceptual frameworks, literature reviews that add to the knowledge base, and book reviews. Occasional special issues from the journal provide deeper investigation into areas of interest within eSports.

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Volume years with an asterisk (*) after them are indicative of the continuous volume publication frequency conversion. Journals that have shifted to the continuous volume frequency are no longer publishing a set number of issues. All regular articles are published together, and special issue articles are separated into their own categories for organizational purposes.

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