Author Guidelines
Title
The title can be in all uppercase letters, or in uppercase with a smaller subtitle. It should be written in Palatino Linotype font, with a maximum of 15 words, and centered. If the article is in Arabic, the title should be written in its transliterated version, with the original Arabic title included underneath.
Author Identity
The author's name should not include titles. The affiliation should be written in full (department, faculty, university, country), with the email address provided underneath. If the article is written by more than one author, the names and affiliations of the second author and any additional authors should be listed after the name and affiliation of the first author.
Abstract
The abstract serves to briefly describe the content of the journal. For journal abstracts, it should be written between 150 and 250 words summarizing the focus and significance of the study, methods, results, and conclusions. The abstract should avoid abbreviations or quotations. It must stand alone without footnotes, consist of a single paragraph, and be typed with single spacing. The abstract should be written in Palatino Linotype-10, justified left and right with 1-line spacing. For articles in Indonesian and English, the abstract should be written in both English and Indonesian. For articles in Arabic, the abstract should be written in both English and Arabic.
Introduction
The introduction is a section of a scientific article that guides readers or others to understand the issues discussed in the article clearly, thoroughly, and systematically. In the introduction, the author or researcher may include sufficient citations. The introduction should include the following elements:
- The context of the research and an overview of the latest scientific developments related to the topic, based on a review of previous research findings published in recent journals.
- The theoretical foundation.
- Previous research results that highlight gaps and the novelty of the current study.
- The focus of the research and insights into the proposed problem-solving approach and/or the ‘promised’ scientific contributions.
Literature Review
This section discusses theories and research results related to or supporting the scientific article. Theories and research results can come from scientific books, national journals, and international journals. References should preferably come from scientific books, scholarly journals, and relevant research published within the last ten (10) years. References should be cited using footnotes in Palatino Linotype-9 pt font, whether for one author (Rokhmad, 2012), two authors (Brown & Saeed, 2015), or more (Mas’ud et al., 2019). If the article is in Arabic, the font used should be Traditional Arabic with an additional 5 pt for each font size guide (except for transliterated titles, names, affiliations, emails, and references which should remain as specified in the journal template).
Method
There are several explanations that should be written here: first, the research methods used, whether quantitative or qualitative, and the approach employed; second, the setting and subjects of the research; third, the data collection techniques; and fourth, the methods of data analysis.
Result
The results should correspond to the research focus outlined in the introduction; if the research focus is three aspects, then the results should address three aspects; if the research focus is four aspects, then the results should address four aspects. If the research method is qualitative, the results should present the narrative obtained from data analysis. If the research method is quantitative, the results should present the statistical analysis findings. The total word count of the article should be between 6,000 and 8,000 words.
Discussion
The discussion section should include:
The meaning/interpretation of the data analysis results.
A comparison with findings from previous research.
Integration of the research results into established bodies of knowledge.
Development of new theories or modification of existing theories.
Implications of the research results.
In the discussion, references should continue to be drawn from scientific books, national and international journals, and relevant research from the past 10 years (Afwadzi & Miski, 2020, p. 57; Suprayogo, 2011).
Conclusion
Write the conclusion based on the results and discussion; it should not be copied directly from the results and discussion sections and must be paraphrased.
References
Citations and references must strictly follow the American Psychological Association (APA) 7th Edition style. References should not be written in Arabic. If references are originally in Arabic, they must be transliterated. References should include only works cited in the article. References should be managed using the Mendeley reference management application.
Afwadzi, B., & Miski, M. (2020). Islam Moderat dan Shī‘ah Zaydiyah: Kontribusi Pemikiran Hadis Muḥammad ibn Ismā‘īl al-Ṣan‘ānī bagi Moderasi Islam di Indonesia. UIN-Maliki Press.
Brown, K. E., & Saeed, T. (2015). Radicalization and counter-radicalization at British universities: Muslim encounters and alternatives. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 38(11), 1952–1968. https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2014.911343
Mas’ud, A., Jazil, S., Subty, T., & Fahmi, M. (2019). Program Penalaran Islam Indonesia dan Gerakan Kontra-Radikalisme. Jurnal Pendidikan Agama Islam (Journal of Islamic Education Studies), 6(2), 175–202. https://doi.org/10.15642/jpai.2018.6.2.175-202
Rokhmad, A. (2012). Radikalisme Islam dan Upaya Deradikalisasi Paham Radikal. Walisongo: Jurnal Penelitian Sosial Keagamaan, 20(1), 79–114. https://doi.org/10.21580/ws.20.1.185
Suprayogo, I. (2011). Hubungan Antara Pergruan Tinggi dan Pesantren. UIN Malang Press.



