Journals
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The Zimbabwe Journal of Business, Economics and Management
The ZJBEM provides an ideal forum for exchange of research output, and information in business, economics, management, hospitality and tourism, and public administration in various formats: full length research papers, work-in progress reports on promising developments, case studies, and best practice articles written by industry experts. Accordingly, we welcome manuscripts that can demonstrate near-term practical usefulness particularly contributions that take a multidisplinary/convergent approach because real world problems are complex in nature.
ZJBEM is published biannually. Further, special issues will be published on contemporary issues from time to time. The journal publishes peer-reviewed articles online in an open access format after meticulous selection through a double-blind peer-review process. The ZJBEM’s future is bright as it will be indexed in the Directory of Open Access Journals. We could reach this stage through the constant support of the Editorial Board members, authors and reviewers.
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Zimbabwe International Journal of Culture and Heritage
The Zimbabwe International Journal of Culture and Heritage (ZIJCH) attempts to create an interactive platform on issues to do with heritage in the African continent and beyond. This journal takes cognisance of the fact that Africa is endowed with rich cultural and diverse natural heritage systems which are key components for national building and restoration of the people’s pride, identities, values and indigenous knowledge systems (IKS) which were seriously eroded during centuries of colonial interference and effects of globalisation.
The journal tries to provide another platform for research that will provide Africans with an opportunity to benefit from their heritage initiatives and communicate them appropriately for their preservation and conservation. Heritage is the full range of our inherited traditions, history, practices, buildings, monuments, objects, and culture. Heritage includes, but is much more than preserving, excavating, displaying, restoring a collection of old things or reconstruction of histories. It is both tangible and intangible, in the sense that, ideas and memories, of songs, recipes, language, dances, traditions, rituals, ceremonies and many other initiatives about who we are and how we identify ourselves, are as important as historical buildings and archaeological sites.