CALL FOR PAPER Journal: International Journal of Security (IJS)

CALL FOR PAPER Journal: International Journal of Security (IJS) Volume: 4  Issue: 6 ISSN:	1985-2320 URL: http://www.cscjournals.org/csc/description.php?JCode=IJS

Important Dates Paper Submission: November 30, 2010 Author Notification: January 01, 2011 Issue Publication:  January / February

About IJS Information Security is an important aspect of protecting the information society from a wide variety of threats. The International Journal of Security (IJS) presents publications and research that builds on computer security and cryptography and also reaches out to other branches of the information sciences. Our aim is to provide research and development results of lasting significance in the theory, design, implementation, analysis, and application of secure computer systems.

IJS provides a platform to computer security experts, practitioners, executives, information security managers, academics, security consultants and graduate students to publish original, innovative and time-critical articles and other information describing research and good practices of important technical work in information security, whether theoretical, applicable, or related to implementation. It is also a platform for the sharing of ideas about the meaning and implications of security and privacy, particularly those with important consequences for the technical community. We welcome contributions towards the precise understanding of security policies through modeling, as well as the design and analysis of mechanisms for enforcing them, and the architectural principles of software and hardware system implementing them.

To build its International reputation, we are disseminating the publication information through Google Books, Google Scholar, Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), Open J Gate, ScientificCommons, Docstoc and many more. Our International Editors are working on establishing ISI listing and a good impact factor for IJS.

IJS List of Topics The realm of International Journal of Security (IJS) extends, but not limited, to the following:

•	Anonymity	•	Anonymity and pseudonymity •	Attacks, security mechanisms, and security service	•	Code security, including mobile code security •	Authorisation	•	Biometrics •	Cellular/wireless/mobile/satellite networks securi	•	Authentication •	Public key cryptography and key management 	•	Confidentiality, privacy, integrity, authenticatio •	Cryptography and cryptanalysis	•	Data confidentiality issues •	Data integrity issues	•	Data recovery •	Database security	•	Denial of service •	Denial of service attacks and countermeasures	•	Dependability and reliability •	Design or analysis of security protocols	•	Distributed access control •	Distributed and parallel systems security	•	Electronic commerce •	Formal security analyses	•	Fraudulent usage •	Information flow	•	Information hiding and watermarking •	Intellectual property protection	•	Intrusion detection •	Key management	•	Multicast security •	Network and Internet security	•	Network forensics •	Network security performance evaluation	•	Non-repudiation •	Peer-to-peer security	•	Prevention of traffic analysis •	Privacy protection	•	Computer forensics •	Revocation of malicious parties	•	Risk assessment and management •	Secure location determination	•	Secure PHY/MAC/routing protocols •	Secure routing protocols	•	Security group communications •	Security in ad hoc networks	•	Security in cellular networks (2G, 2.5G, 3G, B3G, •	Security in communications	•	Security in content-delivery networks •	Security in distributed systems	•	Security in domain name service •	Security in e-mail	•	Security in high-speed networks •	Security in integrated networks	•	Security in integrated wireless networks •	Security in internet and WWW	•	Security in IP networks •	Security in mobile IP	•	Security in optical systems and networks •	Security in peer-to-peer networks	•	Security in satellite networks •	Security in sensor networks	•	Security in VoIP •	Security in wired and wireless integrated networks	•	Security in Wired Networks •	Security in wireless communications	•	Security in wireless internet •	Security in wireless LANs (IEEE 802.11 WLAN, WiFi,	•	Security in wireless MANs (IEEE 802.16 and WiMAX) •	Security in wireless PANs (Bluetooth and IEEE 802.	•	Security policies •	Security specification techniques	•	Security standards •	Tradeoff analysis between performance and security	•	Trust establishment •	Viruses worms and other malicious code	•	WLAN and Bluetooth security