Focus and Scope

Aims

Journal of Islamic Civilization and Culture Review (JICCR) aims to promote high-quality and impactful scholarship on Islam by advancing transdisciplinary research that integrates historical, cultural, religious, political, and peace-oriented perspectives. The journal seeks to contribute to international academic debates by publishing theoretically informed and empirically grounded studies that enhance understanding of Islamic civilization in both historical and contemporary contexts.


Focus

JICCR focuses on scholarly works that examine Islam as a dynamic civilization and socio-cultural system, emphasizing analytical depth, methodological rigor, and cross-disciplinary dialogue. The journal prioritizes research that bridges classical Islamic heritage with modern and contemporary challenges, and that engages Islamic studies within broader humanities and social sciences frameworks.


Scope

The scope of JICCR covers, but is not limited to, the following areas:

  1. Islamic Civilization and Heritage
    Development, continuity, and transformation of Islamic civilizations; material and immaterial heritage; intellectual and cultural legacies across regions and periods.

  2. Cultural and Religious Studies in Islam
    Religious practices, cultural expressions, identities, lived religion, and interreligious relations within Muslim societies.

  3. Historical and Contemporary Islamic Thought
    Classical and modern Islamic theology, philosophy, ethics, reform movements, and their socio-intellectual impacts.

  4. Islamic Political Thought and Governance
    Political ideas, governance models, state–religion relations, law, public ethics, and political movements in Muslim contexts.

  5. Security and Peace Studies in the Islamic World
    Conflict, security challenges, peacebuilding, reconciliation, and social cohesion, including Islamic approaches to peace and conflict transformation.

JICCR encourages submissions employing comparative, interdisciplinary, and transdisciplinary methodologies, particularly those presenting perspectives from diverse and underrepresented Muslim societies.