Is there a difference between forthcoming and in press? For example in economics I have never seen "in press" and "forthcoming in [journal]" means that it is accepted If the issue of the journal is already clear some people change it so that it looks like was already published (with a date in the future)
How to cite a conditionally accepted article? - Academia Stack Exchange Is citing it as "forthcoming in journal Y" appropriate, even though it has only been conditionally accepted? You should only write that the paper is "forthcoming" or "to appear" in a journal if the paper has in fact been accepted for publication in that journal The problem with "conditional acceptance" is that it doesn't convey precisely how easy likely it would be for the author to meet the
Citing a Book Chapter where the book is not yet published, and the . . . It might also be possible, in some cases, to contact the author (s) of the other work for their "best guess" as to these things and mark the citation using their words but as a "private communication, publication forthcoming" It is fairly common to mark some citations in new work as private communication, actually
In CV, how to mention articles published only in arxiv? Accepted but not yet published: accepted, forthcoming, to appear, in press Under review but not yet accepted: under review, submitted to [journal conference] Not yet submitted: manuscript, preprint Not even finished yet: work in progress The term "near future publications" would only be appropriate for the category of accepted but not yet published work, but even there it sounds strange and
How to cite a working paper, preprint, or manuscript? Check the style guide that you are writing against, these often have guidelines on how to cite unpublished works For example, the CA Style Guide (from Chicago Manual of Style) states: Unpublished Work Forthcoming works (works that have been accepted for publication and are in the publication process) are listed in the References Cited and are cited as references, with "forthcoming