JAR Magazine - No 1 - Qtr 1 2007
The inaugural issue of JAR, a quarterly email magazine, launches with the mission to provide a global platform for debating the significance of the extraterrestrial presence. It fe
Magazine Collection
AI-generated English summaries and cover images of Journal of Abduction-Encounter Research (JAR) from the Archives for the Unexplained (AFU) in Norrköping, Sweden. Each entry summarises the complete contents of an issue — articles, sighting reports, interviews, key people, locations, and dates.
The inaugural issue of JAR, a quarterly email magazine, launches with the mission to provide a global platform for debating the significance of the extraterrestrial presence. It fe
The second issue of JAR, the Journal of Abduction-Encounter Research, is released, offering insights into the UFO community's understanding of extraterrestrial presence and abducti
This issue of JAR focuses on the UFO abduction-encounter phenomenon, emphasizing the role of ordinary citizens in chronicling this history. Articles discuss the challenges of accep
This issue of JAR Magazine (First Quarter 2008) delves into UFO abduction phenomena. It includes an editorial discussing the public's apparent lack of interest in the UFO cover-up,
JAR issue 5, published in the Second Quarter of 2008, focuses on UFO phenomena, abductions, and government involvement. It features an editorial questioning societal avoidance of U
This issue of JAR (Journal of Abduction-Encounter Research) explores various facets of UFO phenomena. Articles discuss an abductee's encounter with a human-looking hybrid, paranorm
This issue of JAR Journal of Abduction-Encounter Research (Fourth Quarter 2008) features articles on alien technology, including 'Alien machines I have seen' by Nadine Lalich, deta
This issue of JAR (Journal of Abduction-Encounter Research) features articles on personal abduction experiences, the potential health impacts on UFO researchers, a long-term alien
This issue of JAR (July 2010) features articles on the political implications of alien abductions and the concept of Exopolitics, questioning its current direction. It details alle