Canadian Slavonic Papers
Published by Taylor & Francis
ISSN : 0008-5006
Abbreviation : Can. Slavon. Pap.
Aims & Scope
Canadian Slavonic Papers / Revue canadienne des slavistes (CSP/RCS) , founded in 1956, is a quarterly, interdisciplinary journal of the Canadian Association of Slavists, publishing in English and French.
CSP/RCS is devoted to problems of Central and Eastern Europe.
It is a forum for scholars from a range of disciplines: language and linguistics, literature, history, political science, sociology, economics, anthropology, geography, philosophy, and the arts.
This is the only interdisciplinary scholarly outlet for Slavists in Canada and one of the major journals in the field in North America.
It has an international readership and subscribers.
The journal is supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, grants from the University of Alberta, and the membership of the Canadian Association of Slavists.
View Aims & ScopeMetrics & Ranking
Impact Factor
Year | Value |
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2025 | 1.6 |
SJR (SCImago Journal Rank)
Year | Value |
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2024 | 0.716 |
Quartile
Year | Value |
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2024 | Q1 |
h-index
Year | Value |
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2024 | 16 |
Impact Factor Trend
Abstracting & Indexing
Journal is indexed in leading academic databases, ensuring global visibility and accessibility of our peer-reviewed research.
Subjects & Keywords
Journal’s research areas, covering key disciplines and specialized sub-topics in Arts and Humanities and Social Sciences, designed to support cutting-edge academic discovery.
Most Cited Articles
The Most Cited Articles section features the journal's most impactful research, based on citation counts. These articles have been referenced frequently by other researchers, indicating their significant contribution to their respective fields.
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The Lviv Pogrom of 1941: The Germans, Ukrainian Nationalists, and the Carnival Crowd
Citation: 34
Authors: John-Paul
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The Comparative Failure of Machine Politics, Administrative Resources and Fraud
Citation: 21
Authors: Kerstin
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Language and Self in Cross-Cultural Autobiography: Eva Hoffman’s<i>Lost in Translation</i>
Citation: 20
Authors: Mary
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Permanent or Uninterrupted Revolution: Lenin, Trotsky, and their Successors on the Transition to Socialism
Citation: 17
Authors: H. Gordon
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The Valuev Circular and Censorship of Ukrainian Publications in the Russian Empire (1863–1876): Intention and Practice
Citation: 17
Authors: Johannes
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A conceptual limbo of genocide: Russian rhetoric, mass atrocities in Ukraine, and the current definition’s limits
Citation: 15
Authors: Oksana
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From Historical to “Dialectical†Populism: The Case of Post-Communist Romania
Citation: 15
Authors: Michael
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Narrating the war theologically: does Russian Orthodoxy have a future in Ukraine?
Citation: 15
Authors: Andrii