Author Guidelines
General Author Guidelines
1. The article must be scientific (substantially contained corpus, perspective, and context) based on empirical research or conceptual ideas. The article's content has not been published yet in any Journal and should not be submitted simultaneously to another Journal.
2. Articles submitted for publication must meet the following conditions:
The article is typed in 1.15 spacing, and must be between 15-25 pages, not including title, abstract, keywords, and bibliography, on A4-paper size, with font of "Times New Roman" 12 pt with transliteration. (See the JOURNAL TEMPLATE).
Writing organizations include: 1) title, 2) author's name (without title), 3) author's agency or affiliation (s), 4) email of author(s), (5) abstract in English and Bahasa Indonesia no more than 250 words, 6) keywords, 7) introduction, 8) discussion, 9) conclusion, and (10) bibliography. The title should not be more than 15 words. The author’s name(s) should be written in the full name without academic title (degree), and completed with institutional affiliation(s) as well as the corresponding address (e-mail address). The abstract consists of the discourses of the discipline area; the article's aims; methodology (if any); research findings; and contribution to the discipline of areas study. The abstract should be written in English and Bahasa Indonesia. Introduction consisting of the literature review (it would be better if the research finding is not latest than ten years) and novelty of the article; scope and limitation of the problem discussed; and the main argumentation of the article. Discussion or description and analysis consisting of the reasoning process of the article’s main argumentation. The conclusion should consist of answering research problem, based on the theoretical significance/conceptual construction. All of the citations and bibliography required to be written use reference manager tools such as Mendeley, Zotero, etc., based on the Chicago Manual of Style 16th edition (complete note) as follows:
Book [example]
Ibnu al-Qayyim al-Jauziyah. Zādu Al-Maʿād Fī Hadyi Khairi Al-ʿIbād. Cetakan ke. Beirut: Mu’assasah al-Risālah, 1994.
Carter, Michael G. Sībawayhi’s Principles : Arabic Grammar and Law in Early Islamic Thought. Edited by Joseph E. Lowry, Devin J. Stewart, Shawkat M. Toorawa, and International. USA: Lockwood Press, 2016.
Dauda, Kazeem Oluwaseun. “Islamophobia and Religious Intolerance: Threats to Global Peace and Harmonious Co-Existence.” QIJIS (Qudus International Journal of Islamic Studies) 8, no. 2 (December 31, 2020): 257. doi:10.21043/qijis.v8i2.6811.
Mohamed, Hazik. Beyond Fintech: Technology Applications for the Islamic Economy. Edited by Karimah Samsudin. Singapore: World Scientific Publishing, 2021.
Tayeb, Azmil. Islamic Education in Indonesia and Malaysia : Shaping Minds, Saving Souls. New York: Routledge, 2018.
Journal [example]
Dauda, Kazeem Oluwaseun. “Islamophobia and Religious Intolerance: Threats to Global Peace and Harmonious Co-Existence.” QIJIS (Qudus International Journal of Islamic Studies) 8, no. 2 (December 31, 2020): 257.doi:10.21043/qijis.v8i2.6811.
The order of the bibliography is written alphabetically. Transliteration Arab-Latin follows the guidelines of transliteration.
When a source is cited for the first time, complete information is provided: full name(s) of the author(s), title of the source in italics, place of publication, publishing company, date of publication, and the specific page cited. For the following citations of the same source, list the author’s last name, two or three words of the title, and the specific page number(s). The word ibid., op.cit., and loc. cit. are may not be used anymore.
Example in footnotes:
1Mircea Eliade (ed.), The Encyclopedia of Religion, vol. 8 (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1995), h. 18.
2Norman Daniel, Islam and the West (Oxford: One World Publications, l99l), h. 190.
3Mircea Eliade (ed.), The Encyclopedia, h. 119-30.
Detail information of the footnotes:
- Holy book
Al-Qur’ân, Al-Baqarah/2: 185.
Perjanjian Baru, Mrk. 2: 18.
- Qur’anic translation
1Departemen Agama RI, al-Qur’an dan Terjemahannya (Jakarta: Darus Sunnah, 2005), h. 55.
- Book
1Muḥammad ‘Ajjaj al-Khaṭib, Uṣul al-Ḥadith: ‘Ulumuh wa Muṣṭalaḥuh (Beirut: Dâr al-Fikr, 1989), h. 57.
- Buku terjemahan
1Toshihiko Izutsu, Relasi Tuhan dan Manusia: Pendekatan Semantik terhadap al-Qur’an, terj. Agus Fahri Husein dkk (Yogyakarta: Tiara Wacana, 2003), h. 14.
- Voluminous book
1Muḥammad al-Ṭâhir b. ‘Ashur, al-Taḥrir wa al-Tanwir, Vol. 25 (Tunisia: Dâr al-Suḥûn, 2009), h. 76.
1Muḥammad b. Ismâ‘il al-Bukharî, al-Jami‘ al-Ṣaḥiḥ, Vol. 2 (Beirut: Dar al-Kutub al-‘Ilmiyah, 1999), h. 77.
- Article in book
1Sahiron Syamsuddin, “Metode Intratekstualitas Muhammad Shahrur dalam Penafsiran al-Qur’an” dalam Abdul Mustaqim dan Sahiron Syamsuddin (eds.), Studi al-Qur’an Kontemporer: Wacana Baru Berbagai Metodologi Tafsir (Yogyakarta: Tiara Wacana, 2002), h. 139.
- Article in encyclopedia
1M. Th. Houtsma, “Kufr” dalam A. J. Wensinck, at al. (ed.), First Encyclopaedia of Islam, Vol. 6 (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1987), h. 244.
- Article in journal
1Muhammad Adlin Sila, “The Festivity of Maulid Nabi in Cikoang, South Sulawesi: Between Remembering and Exaggerating the Spirit of Prophet”, Studia Islamika 8, no. 3 (2001): h. 9.
- Article in mass media
1Masdar F. Mas’udi, “Hubungan Agama dan Negara”, Kompas, 7 Agustus 2002.
- Article in Internet
1Muḥammad Shaḥru>r, “Reading the Religious Teks: a New Approach” dalam http://www.shahrour.org/25 Februari 2010/diakses 5 Juni 2010.
- Thesis or dissertation
1Syahruddin Usman, “Kinerja Guru Penddikan Agama Islam pada SMAN dan SMKN Kota Makassar”, Disertasi (Makassar: PPs UIN Alauddin, 2010), h. 200.
The guidelines for Indonesia-Arabic transliteration are as follows:
No |
Arab |
Indonesia |
Arab |
Indonesia |
1 |
أ |
’ |
ض |
Ḍ |
2 |
ب |
B |
ط |
Ṭ |
3 |
ت |
T |
ظ |
Ẓ |
4 |
ث |
Ṡ |
ع |
‘ |
5 |
ج |
J |
غ |
G |
6 |
ح |
Ḥ |
ف |
F |
7 |
خ |
Kh |
ق |
Q |
8 |
د |
D |
ك |
K |
9 |
ذ |
Ż |
ل |
L |
10 |
ر |
R |
م |
M |
11 |
ز |
Z |
ن |
N |
12 |
س |
S |
و |
W |
13 |
ش |
Sy |
ھ |
H |
14 |
ص |
S |
ي |
Y |
To sound a long vowel (madd), author should write a horizontal mark (macron) above the letter a, i, and u. The double vowel sound (diftong) is marked by margin of the vowel (harakat) and letter to be “aw” and “ay”, such as Maw‘iẓah, Layla. Shaddah, or double sound, is transliterated by writing twice the letter, like kaffah, ṭayyib. Alif-lam (lam ta‘rif) is transliterated as its origins, like al-manhaj and al-salam. The word which contains ta’ marbuṭah has two signs: first, if the word placed as ṣifah (modifier) or muḍaf ilayh, it is transliterated as “ah”, like al-akhlaq al-karimah, yawm al-qiyamah; second, if the function of the word is muḍaf, it should be transliterated as at, like kalimat allah.
3. Every submitted paper is independently reviewed by at least one peer-reviewer. The decision for publication, amendment, or rejection is based upon their reports/recommendations. If single or more reviewers consider a manuscript unsuitable for publication in this journal, a statement explaining the basis for the decision will be sent to the authors within three months of submission.
Revision of Manuscripts
Manuscripts sent back to the authors for revision should be returned to the editor immediately. Revised manuscripts can be sent to the editorial office through the Online Submission Interface. The revised manuscripts returned later than three months will be considered new submissions.
Tables and Figures
Tables are sequentially numbered with the table title and number above the table. Tables should be centered in the column or on the page. Tables should be followed by a line space (12 pt). Elements of a table should be single-spaced. However, double spacing can be used to show data groupings or separate parts within the table. Table headings should be in 10 pt. Tables are referred to in the text by the table number, e.g., Table 1. Do not show the vertical line in the table. There is only a horizontal line should be shown in the table. Figures should, preferably, be included in the electronic version of the manuscript in an appropriate format as follows; JPG, PNG.
Manuscript
The manuscript should be typed using word processors (Microsoft Word, Open Office, Rich Text Format, or WordPerfect document file format) software. The font used throughout the paper is Times New Roman. The paper size is A4 (i.e., 210 x297 mm), with a 4 cm margin at the top, a 3 cm margin at the bottom, a 4 cm margin on the left, and a 3 cm margin on the right.
When submitting a manuscript, the author guarantees that the same manuscript or a similar version has not been submitted to any other journal or publication. Footnotes must accompany submissions and must also be accompanied by a complete bibliography of works cited in the text. Spelling, capitalization, and punctuation must be consistent within each article.
Manuscripts submitted to this journal should follow the heading below, except for the review article:
Title; Authors Name; Authors Affiliation; The E-mail Address; Abstract; Keywords; Introduction; Discussion; Conclusion; Acknowledgments; and References.
Paper Title
The title should reflect a specific focus of study based on the central issue of the article so that the author can get a general statement and sub-title specifically confining the scope of the study. In addition, the title should be precise.
The title should be centered in 12 pt capital bold of Times New Roman with transliteration. The title should have 0 pts space above and 12 pts below.
Authors' Name and Affiliations
Write Author(s) names without titles and professional positions such as Prof, Dr, etc. Do not abbreviate your last/family name. Always give your full name. Write clear affiliation of all Authors.
Abstract and Keywords
An abstract look like an advertisement for the article. The reader will continue reading the article if he is interested in its abstract. Thus, the abstract should tell the prospective reader what the writer did and highlight the key findings. Avoid using uncommon abbreviations. The abstract must be accurate, brief, clear, precise, honest, and specific. Use words that reflect the precise meaning. Please consider word limitations (150-250 words) with single spacing, one paragraph, and font of Times New Roman with transliteration 10 pt.
Keywords are the labels of your article and are helpful for indexing and searching. Therefore the keywords should represent the content and highlight the article. Use words that only focus on your article. Each word/phrase in the keyword should be separated by a comma (,) and use font of Times New Roman with transliteration 10pt.
Introduction
In the Introduction, the authors should state the objectives of the work at the end of the introduction section. Before the objective, authors should provide an adequate background and a short literature survey to record the existing solutions, show the differences from previous research, show the main limitation of the previous research, show what you want to achieve or solve the limitation, to show the novelties of the paper, and to show theoretical construct (if needed) of the research. Ultimately, if the articles are the research results, the authors should state the methods used.
Discussion
Discussions should explore the meaning of the article. The discussion is the most essential part of your article. Here you get a chance to sell your data. Discussions could begin with a summary of the scientific findings from previous researchers authors should explore things that relate to the objectives of the work and give a scientific interpretation and reasons for each of the results or findings presented.
Conclusions
The conclusion should answer the research objectives clearly. Tells how your work will find a theory of knowledge. Without a clear conclusion, reviewers and readers will find it difficult to assess the benefits of your work. Do not restate the abstract or list from the analysis.
Acknowledgment
Recognize those who helped in the research, especially funding supporters of your research. Include individuals who have assisted you in your study: Advisors, Financial supporters, or other supporters, i.e. Proofreaders, Typists and Suppliers, who may have given materials.
References
The bibliography (references) should be appropriately written based on the Chicago Manual of Style 16th edition (complete note).
The author should use primary references for at least 40% of the other references. Primary references include articles in scientific journals, proceedings, dissertations, theses, monographs, books, and others that result from direct research. Authors should be more careful in choosing books as reference libraries because some books cannot be considered as primary sources. At least 40% of the references used are 10-year issues last one.
Daftar Singkatan
Singkatan Umum dan Notasi dalam Pengutipan Singkatan Arti
Singkatan |
Bagian Buku atau Penerbit |
ed. |
edition Rev |
Rev. ed. |
Revised edition |
2nd ed. |
second edition |
Ed. (Eds.) |
Editor (Editors) |
Trans. |
Translator(s) |
n.d. |
no date |
p. (pp.) |
page (pages) |
Vol. |
Volume (as in Vol. 4) |
Vols. Volumes |
(as in Vols. 1–4) |
No. |
Number |
Pt. |
Part |
Tech. Rep. |
Technical Report |
Suppl. |
Supplemen |
et al |
And others |