IAFOR Journal of Literature & Librarianship
Volume 9 – Issue 2 – 2020
Editors: IAFOR Journal of Literature & Librarianship Editor-in-Chief: Dr Bernard Montoneri Independent Researcher, Taiwan Dr Bernard Montoneri earned his PhD (African, Arab, and Asian Words; History, Languages, Literature) and his BA in Chinese from the University of Provence, Aix-Marseille I, France. He has taught Literature (European, French, Children, American, and British) and languages (French, English, and Italian) for almost 25 years. He has studied eight languages, including Sanskrit, and has obtained eight university diplomas. Dr Montoneri was an Associate Professor in the Department of European Languages and Cultures at the National Chengchi University, Taipei, Taiwan from August 2017 to January 2020. He is now an independent researcher living in Taiwan. He has almost 60 publications, including journal papers, conferences papers, and books. He was the co-founder and editor-inchief of the IAFOR Journal of Education until December 31, 2017. Bernard edited 12 issues of the journal. His research interests include French literature, children’s literature, translation studies, French and English writing, automated scoring systems, teaching and learning evaluation, data envelopment analysis, networking and teaching methods. He is a reviewer for top academic journals and has obtained more than 20 teaching and research grants. His latest publication is “Fake News and Fake Research, from the Cave to the Light: Critical reflection and Literature Review”. In B. Montoneri (Ed.), Academic Misconduct and Plagiarism: Case Studies from Universities around the World (Chapter 9). USA: Lexington Books (November 2020). E-mail: editor.literature@iafor.org Co-Editor: Dr Rachel Franks University of Newcastle, Australia Dr Rachel Franks is the Coordinator, Scholarship at the State Library of New South Wales and a Conjoint Fellow at The University of Newcastle, Australia. A qualified educator and librarian, Rachel holds PhDs in Australian crime fiction (CQU) and true crime texts (Sydney). Her research on crime fiction, true crime, popular culture and information science has been presented at numerous conferences as well as for local and national media. An award-winning writer, her work can be found in a wide variety of books, journals and magazines. She edited, with Alistair Rolls, Crime Uncovered: the private investigator (Intellect, 2016). She has also co-edited special issues for several journals and is a regular contributor to the Dictionary of Sydney. E-mail: rachel.franks@newcastle.edu.au
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