
geoinformatics, remote sensing, geodesy, taking into account the aspects of cartography. The subject matter of the materials covers cartography and the related fields, e.g. The submission of the manuscript implies that the work has not been published before in any language. The Editorial Board of The Polish Cartographical Review accepts only the original materials. Mariusz Olczyk, University of Warsaw, Gruyter Poland Waldemar Spallek, University of Wrocław, Poland Kamil Nieścioruk, University of Life Sciences in Lublin, Poland Paweł Kowalski, Warsaw University of Technology, Poland Jolanta Korycka-Skorupa, University of Warsaw, Poland Zbigniew Zwoliński, Adam Mickiewicz University Poznań, Polandĭariusz Gotlib, Warsaw University of Technology, Poland

Vít Voženílek, Palacký University of Olomouc, Czech Republic

Przemysław Śleszyński, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland Rostyslav Sossa, Lviv Polytechnic National University, Ukraine Krzysztof Pokonieczny, Military University of Technology Zaniel Novoa Goicochea, Pontificia Universidad Católica Del Perú Mirosław Krukowski, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University, Poland Krystian Kozioł, AGH University of Science and Technology, Poland Zenon Kozieł, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Poland Wolf Günther Koch, Technische Universität Dresden, Germany Igor Drecki, New Zealand Cartographic Society, New Zealandĭietmar Grünreich, Leibniz University Hannover, Germany Marek Baranowski, Institute of Geodesy and Cartography, PolandĪlgimantas Česnulevičius, Lithuanian University of Educational Sciences, Lithuania Katarzyna Słomska-Przech, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland Jerzy Siwek, University of Warsaw, Poland Similarity Check is a medium that allows for comprehensive manuscripts screening, aimed to eliminate plagiarism and provide a high standard and quality peer-review process.īeata Konopska, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University, Poland The editorial board is participating in a growing community of Similarity Check System's users in order to ensure that the content published is original and trustworthy. Sciendo archives the contents of this journal in Portico - digital long-term preservation service of scholarly books, journals and collections. The consultative body is the international Advisory Editorial Board. The reviewers are foreign and Polish scientists.


The magazine is a quarterly that is edited by Polish scientists connected with Polish Geographical Society. Today, like before the World War II, The Polish Cartographical Review is an important forum for exchange of ideas between the cartographers - workers of science, and the contractors or users of space information in the field of research related to utilitarian aspects of the cartographic activity. In the area of interest of the magazine are the problems of theory of cartography, editing and perception processes of maps, the use of cartography in the studies of social and economic phenomena, including the use of the remote sensing and GIS tools, as well as the cultural role of the map and the history of cartography. It reflects the main development directions of the contemporary cartography that is worked up by the cartographers and another specialists from the other fields of science for whom the map is the subject of research or the visual presentation of the results. The thematic scope of the articles that are published in The Polish Cartographical Review is very diverse. As a result, cartography as a field of knowledge, dealing with the methodology of information transmission via maps, is becoming increasingly important especially facing the new challenges posed by the technological changes, and in the natural consequence - cultural ones. The quarterly plays an essential role in connection with the increasing importance of spatial information in the contemporary world as well as due to the expanding of use of maps in many areas of social and economic life. It has been distributed since 1969 as the continuation of the periodical that had been published in Lvov for 11 years (during the years 1923 to 1934) under the title The Polish Cartographical Review. Rev, PCR) is one of the oldest cartographic journals in the world. Journal's original version: electronic versionħ0 points in the evaluation of Ministry of Education and Science
