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Author Guidelines

Instructions for Preparing Paper for

Mangabdi: Journal of Community Engagement in Religion, Social, and Humanities

A.  General Organization of the Paper

  1.  The paper has not been published or is not in the process of submission for publication to other media and does not contain elements of plagiarism, and enclosing written statement from the author.
  2. The paper is written in Indonesian or English with 1 spaces, 12 Times New Roman, A4 paper size, 3 cm margin-top, 2,5 margin-bottom and 2 cm margin right
  3. The length of the paper is at least 4000 words (about 14 pages) and does not exceed 7000 words (about 20 pages) including drawings, graphs/tables (if any) and bibliography.
  4. The paper should enclose the abstracts in English and Indonesian of its content consisting from 150 to 250 words.
  5. Referring source citation technique using bodynote and bibliography, is the American Pshycological Association citation system.
  6. The paper should be sent to the Online Submission Mangabdi: Journal of Community Engagement in Religion, Social, and Humanities with https://ejournal.uinmybatusangkar.ac.id/ojs/index.php/mangabdi/about/submissions#onlineSubmissions  (registered).  
  7. All papers in the editor will be through blind review process by reviewers after reviewing by the editor
  8. The Paper will be edited back by the editor without changing the content 

B.  Paper Structures

  1.  Title
  • The title should be accurate, unambiguous, specific, and complete. Do not contain infrequently-used abbreviations
  • The title of the paper should be in 16 pt bold Times New Roman and be centered. The title should have 0 pts space above and 0 pts 
        2. Authors Name and Affiliations          
  • Write Author(s) names without title and professional positions such as Prof, Dr, Production Manager, etc. Do not abbreviate your last/family name. Always give your First and Last names. Write clear affiliation of all Authors. Affiliation includes:name of department/unit, (faculty), name of university, country, email address
  • Author names should be in 12 pt Times NewRoman bold with one space.
  • The institutional affiliation of the student follows the place where the student is studying.
  • The author's names and author's order (if more than one author) must have been agreed upon by all authors, usually based on contributions and participation in research
  •  execution and report writing, and all authors are responsible for the content of the article
        3.  Abstract
  • The abstract should stand alone, means that no citation in abstract. Consider it the advertisement of your article. Abstract should tell the prospective reader what you did and highlight the key findings. Avoid using technical jargon and uncommon abbreviations. You must be accurate, brief, clear and specific. Use words which reflect the precise meaning, Abstract should be precise and honest. Please follow word limitations (150‐250 words).

      4.    Keywords

  •  Keywords are the labels of your manuscript and critical to correct indexing and searching. Therefore the keywords should represent the content and highlight of your  article. Use only those abbreviations that are firmly established in the field. Each words/phrase in keyword should be separated by a semicolon (;), not a comma (,).
  • Keywords consist of 3 - 5 words and / or word groups.

C. INTRODUCTION

  1. Introduction  should be written  capital letter, 12pt, Times New Roman, bold, one space
  2. In Introduction, Authors should state the objectives of the work at the end of introduction section. Before the objective, Authors should provide an adequate background, and very short literature survey in order to record the existing solutions/method, to show which is the best of previous researchers, to show the main limitation of the previous researchers, to show what do you hope to achieve (to solve the limitation), and to show the scientific merit or novelties of the paper. Avoid a detailed literature survey or a summary of the results.

D. RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS

  1. RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS  should be written  capital letter, 12pt, Times New Roman, bold, one space
  2. Results should be clear and concise. The results should summarize (scientific) findings rather than providing data in great detail. Please highlight differences between your results or findings and the previous publications by other researchers. The discussion should explore the significance of the results of the work, not repeat them. A combined Results and Discussion section is often appropriate. Avoid extensive citations and discussion of published literature. In a discussion, it is the most important section of your article. Here you get the chance to sell your data. Make the discussion corresponding to the results, but do not reiterate the results. Often should begin with a brief summary of the main scientific findings (not experimental results). The following components should be covered in a discussion: How do your results relate to the original question or objectives outlined in the Introduction section (what)? Do you provide 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?
  3. simplify tables and use open tables, and map images are more focused on the object being studied and not too large and complicated file size (attempted in JPG format); tables and pictures are numbered. Examples of table writing: Table 3.
  4. The use of subheads in the discussion in accordance with the purposes of discussion
  5. The technique of citing referral sources uses footnotes, using the American Psychological Association, see the example in technical footnote writing.

E. CONCLUSION

  1. Conclusion should be written  capital letter, 12pt, Times New Roman, bold, one space
  2. A conclusion should answer the objectives of the research. Tells how your work advances the field from the present state of knowledge. Without clear Conclusions, reviewers and readers will find it difficult to judge the work, and whether or not it merits publication in the journal. Do not repeat the Abstract, or just list experimental results. Provide a clear scientific justification for your work, and indicate possible applications and extensions. You should also suggest future experiments and/or point out those that are underway.

F. THANK-YOU- NOTE 

  1. If there is an ACKNOWLEDGMENT, it is capitalized, 1 spaced and bolded
  2. Contains gratitude to the funding agencies, and or individuals who have assisted in the implementation of research and article writing.

G. REFERENCES 

  1. References be written  capital letter, 12pt, Times New Roman, bold , one space
  2. The literature listed in the bibliography contains only the sources referred to or quoted in the article
  3. The referral source referred to in the article should refer to one or more scientific journal articles
  4. The article should refer to or quote one or several articles of FIRMAN: Journal of Qur'anic Studies
  5. Techniques of writing a bibliography, using the system cite American Pshycological Association. More can be seen in the technical provisions of the bibliography.
H. TECHNICAL PROVISIONS OF NEXT WRITING 
  1. Quote Writing
  2. Referral citation in the discussion should not be too long.
  3. Direct quotes less than five lines are written between full quotation marks united in a paragraph and tilted (italic).
  4. Direct quotes of five or more lines are written in a separate paragraph without quotation marks. The writing position is assigned a straight indent to the starting line of the paragraph.
  5. The indirect quote is quoting a text that is extracted and written in its own sentence, written as part of the paragraph without quotes/quotation marks.
  6. Citing research results or opinions of others should use an indirect quote (using your own sentence, not exactly the same sentence).
  7. Citing research results or opinions of others should use an indirect quote (using your own sentence, not exactly the same sentence).
  8. Quotations of Qur'anic verses and Hadiths are written in Arabic letters according to the original text, including reading signs, using Traditional Arabic Fonts 16 bold or using the Quran application in Microsoft Word. The verses of the Qur'an are written complete with the name and the number of suras and verse numbers, while the Hadith is written complete with a sanad and the original and equipped with the footnote containing: The name of the book, volume, chapter, number of hadith and page. Example:
  •     Based on Allah's saying in Surah Al-Ankabut [29]: 67 :

  (69)أَوَلَمْ يَرَوْا أَنَّا جَعَلْنَا حَرَمًا آمِنًا وَيُتَخَطَّفُ النَّاسُ مِنْ حَوْلِهِمْ                                      

 

  • This is in line  with the words of Prophet Muhammad Saw:

عَنْ عَائِشَةَ (رَضِيَّ اللهُ عَنْهَا) قاَلَ: كَانَ رَسُولُ اللهِ (صَلَّى اللهُ عَلَيْهِ وَسَلَّم) إِذَا عَصَفَتِ الرِّيْحُ قاَلَ: ''اَللَّهُمَّ إِنِّي أَسْأَلُكَ خَيْرَهَا وَخَيْرَ مَا فِيْهَا وَخَيْرَ ماَ أَرْسَلْتَ بِهِ، وَأَعُوْذُ بِكَ مِنْ شَرِّهَا وَشَرِّ مَا فِيْهَا وَشَرِّ مَا أَرْسَلْتَ بِهِ'' (رواه مسلم)·

 

  • Excerpts of excerpts of the Qur'anic verses in one verse, marked with a point three before or after. Example :

                                                                                                                   :50:[29] Based on Allah's saying in Surah Al-Ankab 

 

...قُلْ إِنَّمَا الْآيَاتُ عِنْدَ اللَّهِ وَإِنَّمَا أَنَا نَذِيرٌ مُبِينٌ (50)

  • Annotation (short description) is written between two large brackets [...] directly after an annotated phrase or sentence. An annotation over a line is written as a footnote.
  • Quotes from Qur'anic verses are not required footnotes because the name and number of suras and verse numbers have been written in the quoted verse.
    9. Writing Quote Footnotes and References
  •  The technique of writing footnotes, using the citation system of Chicago Manual of Style 16th edition (full note, no ibid) font Times New Roman 10, is written in sequence: Author name [no rank and title], Typed book title, print/edition [if there], volume/series [if any] (Place/publisher city: Publisher name, Year of issue), page number.
  •   Edited book by editor followed "ed." Without brackets after name writing. If the book is written without city publisher typed "t.k."; without a typed publisher "t.p."; if no year published typed "t.t.". If the year of issuance of the yearHijriyah typed "H." after the mention of the year. Page without writing page symbols, directly on the writing of numbers. If you want to mention again the source of the preceding must be mentioned the name of the author and followed by the name of the book in question. In this recall, no particular term is used: ibid., Op. cit., and loc. cit .
  •  Referral sources derived from Arabic, written in Latin alphabet based on Al-Bayan: Jurnal Studi Al-Qur'an dan Tafsir  transliteration [Legal of Congress] by changing the font to Times New Arabic 10 (see Al-Bayan Jurnal Studi Al-Qur'an dan Tafsir transliteration guide).
  •  The technique of writing a bibliography, using the American Psychological Association. The name of the author is written first by name, followed by the first and middle names (or initials). The title of the book (typed italically). Print / Edition. Volume / Series (if applicable). City of Issuer: Name of Issuer, Issue Year.
  • If the literature is written more than two people: The first author's name is written first last name, followed by second author and so on and last name does not need to be reversed like the first author. Written 1 space, sequentially alphabetically without number. The writing of the bibliography does not use et al., In lieu of the second author and so on.
  • Referral sources derived from Arabic, written in Latin alphabet based on Mangabdi: Journal of Community Engagement in Religion, Social, and Humanities transliteration [Legal of Congress] by changing  the font to Times New Arabic 12 (see AFIRMAN: Journal of Qur'anic Studies transliteration guide).

 

Submission Preparation Checklist

As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.

  1. The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
  2. The submission file is in OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, RTF, or WordPerfect document file format.
  3. Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.
  4. The text is single-spaced; uses a 12-point font; employs italics, rather than underlining (except with URL addresses); and all illustrations, figures, and tables are placed within the text at the appropriate points, rather than at the end.
  5. The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines, which is found in About the Journal.
  6. If submitting to a peer-reviewed section of the journal, the instructions in Ensuring a Blind Review have been followed.
 

Copyright Notice

Authors who publish with Mangabdi: Journal of Community Engagement in Religion, Social, and Humanities agree to the following terms:

  • Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgment of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.
  • Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgment of its initial publication in this journal.
  • Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work (See The Effect of Open Access).

 

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