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Kate Kuzminski's avatar

An important reminder for new(er) authors: even those of us with a long publication record get rejections. This piece (https://nationalinterest.org/feature/can-the-great-america-india-team-survive-past-obama-16852) started at WOTR, but wasn't quite the right fit. The WOTR editor shared it with DefenseOne, which received no response. We then pulled our submission from DefenseOne and sent to The National Interest, where it was published nearly immediately.

A bit of advice on what worked: a) submit a clearly written draft; makes it easier to find the right home if your initial pitch doesn't work; b) be kind and courteous to every editor you work with--they want you to succeed, even if not at their publication; and c) be both patient and persistent.

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Jahara Matisek's avatar

I wrote a paper on gray zone deterrence while in grad school that I eventually submitted to STRATCOM for an essay contest that I won. Thinking I wrote an awesome paper, I submitted it to a peer reviewed journal to basically learn that I had submitted trash, to include one peer reviewer making a comment about my writing needing a native English edit. Anyways, after 1.5 years of rejection at 6 different journals, I finally figured out how to get the article published:

https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/jss/vol10/iss3/2/

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