AUTHOR GUIDELINES

General Author Guidelines

  1. The Manuscript should be written in Indonesian or English and have never been published or is not in the process of submission for publication to other media and should not contain elements of plagiarism. Articles submitted to this journal should be written in English or Indonesian. The word limit for submitted articles is 4.000-6.000 words including abstracts and references.
  2. The Manuscript may take the form of research, case studies, or literary studies.
  3. The author should register as an author. The guide to register and submit the paper is at the bottom.
  4. The Manuscript will be published in At-Tamwil: Kajian Ekonomi Syariah after being reviewed by peer reviewers.
  5. The Manuscript should be prepared according to the following author guidelines and Template.

Manuscript Preparation Guidelines
Structure of the manuscripts

  1. Title: The title should be short, bright, and informative, but does not exceed 20 words. It has to be pinpointed with the issues discussed. The article title does not contain any uncommon abbreviation. The main ideas should be written first and followed then by explanations.
  2. Author's Name and Institution: The author's name is written without academic titles and positions, accompanied by the name of the institution, city/district, country, and email address.
  3. Abstract: Abstracts are written in Indonesian or English and consist of the Purpose, Method, Finding, Research Implication, Originality, and Keyword (3-5 Words). Abstract set a maximum of 250 words, including keywords and article classification. 
  4. Introduction: The introduction should include the background, the literature review or the summary of previous relevant studies, and the aims of writing the article. The introduction (also the next text) is written with Cambria font size 12 and single space (1.15 pt). Articles submitted to this journal should be written in English or Indonesian. The word limit for submitted articles is 4.000-6.000 words including abstracts and references.
  5. Method: Methods should be described in detail practically instead of conceptually. The Methods section contains enough information to enable the readers to understand what practically was done. Avoid giving too long a conceptual explanation about what a certain method, approach, or research type means. Instead, emphasize explaining how data was obtained or data collection techniques, coded, analyzed, and validated. This is also the space in which the authors, if necessary, can explain reasons for choosing any specific theoretical framework for the current research they are doing.
  6. Result and Discussion: This part consists of the research results and how they are discussed. The results obtained from the research have to be supported by sufficient data.  The research results and the discovery must be the answers, or the research hypothesis stated previously in the introduction part. The following components should be covered in the discussion: How do your results relate to the original question or objectives outlined in the Introduction section (what/how)? Do you provide an interpretation scientifically for each of your results or findings presented (why)? Are your results consistent with what other investigators have reported (what else)? Or are there any differences? This section is the main part of the article. This section should significantly explore the research findings without redundant and long direct quotations. The discussions in each section are comprehensively, logically, and systematically described.
  7. Conclusion: The conclusion does not contain a repeat of the results and discussion, but rather a summary of the findings as expected. Conclusions involve some extrapolation, including suggestions for future research, limitations of the findings, and implications of the findings.
  8. Bibliography: Citation must be in the form of in-text and bibliography based on APA 7th Edition (American Psychological Association). The citation format used in this journal uses the Bodynote model according to the characteristics of each reference, such as books, translated books, periodicals or volumes, anthologies, articles in book chapters, articles in journals, articles in encyclopedias, articles in mass media (magazines, tabloids, bulletins, and newspapers), research reports, theses, dissertations, manuscripts, and holly books. References are organized alphabetically, and the reference manager application must be used, Mendeley or Zotero.