The East Asian Society of
British History
Call for Papers
The East Asian Journal of British History is an annual journal published in English by The East Asian Society of British History on topics related to the British Isles. The purpose of the journal is to promote scholarly dialogue among historians and scholars on Britain and its history. The East Asian Society of British History invites scholars to contribute articles, reviews and texts, and studies series.

Submission
The East Asian Journal of British History welcomes submission of scholarly articles on the history of the British Isles. A copy of the manuscript should be submitted to the editorial board by email at katsuta@lu-tokyo.ac.jp
The editors of the EAJBH seek articles that provide new contents and perspectives and make a fresh contribution to historical knowledge. Our principal consideration in determining whether an article should be published is its appropriateness to the readership of the EAJBH.
No manuscript will be considered for publication if it is concurrently considered by another journal or if it has been published or is soon to be published elsewhere.
All articles will be refereed, with the final decision made by the editorial board.
Contributors are requested to follow the Style Guidelines given below.
Copyright of the articles, reviews and texts, and studies series remains with the EASBH.
cf. Style Guide
Correction and Apology
2021-08-11
Regarding the book review by Tomoko Akami published in The East Asian Journal of British History , vol. 8 (2021), we would like to correct the second paragraph on page 74 as follows. The online PDF version has already been corrected. We sincerely apologize to our readers.
Although she has published in English as well, including Japan and Britain in Shanghai, 1925–31 (Palgrave Macmillan, 1995), the current book, The League of Nations and the East Asian Imperial Order, 1920–1946 (2020), is her well-awaited monograph on the League in English. It makes her valuable past and present works on the League in East Asia available to non-Japanese reading scholars. For those who are familiar with her works in Japanese, the book shows how she locates her works in the recent scholarship on the League (and the United Nations) more broadly. Below, I hope to illuminate this latter aspect as well.








