..:: INFORMATION ::..
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SUBMISSIONS |
FOCUS AND SCOPE |
AUTHOR GUIDELINES |
OPEN ACCES POLICY |
PUBLICATION ETHIC |
EDITOR BOARD |
REVIEWERS |
PEER REVIEW PROCESS |
REVIEWER'S GUIDELINE |
SCREENING PLAGIARISM |
Author Guidelines
Title
The title should not exceed 25 words; it should be clear, concise, and informative. Abbreviations should be avoided.
Name of the author
The name of the author is written without any academic degree, followed by the name of the author’s institution, located under the title of the article. In the case manuscript written by a team, the editor is only in contact with the main author or the first mentioned. The main author must include his/her correspondence address or email.
Abstract with keywords
The length of the abstract is around 150-250 words, while the limit of keywords is 3-5 words. The abstract, at the least, must contain the aim, methods, and result in the research.
Introduction
The introduction should contain (sequentially) the general background and research question or hypothesis. If there is a literature review, it can be included in this chapter. The study objective should be written at the end of the introduction.
Literature Review
Investigates the gap that will be exposed and solved. The flow of all the ideas is required to be clear, linked, well-crafted and well developed. It serves as the source of the research question and especially the base or the hypotheses that respond to the research objective. We advise using current and primary sources from trusted international references (top tier-journals)
Hyphotesis Development
This section contains about theory and literature referenced and linked to writing. For research with hypothesis testing, the hypothesis development is built by supporting theory, previous research, and logical argumentation
Methods
The research methods should elaborate on the method utilized in addressing the issues including the method of analysis. It should contain enough details allowing the reader to evaluate the appropriateness of methods as well as the reliability and validity of findings.
Results
The author should explain the results of the research (what was discovered) in detail.
Discussion
The research result and discussion section contain the results of the research finding and their ensuing discussions. The finding acquired from the results of the conducted research should be written with the supplementary support of adequate data. The research results and findings should be able to resolve or provide explanations to the question stated in the introduction.
Conclusion
The concluding statement should contain a summary and suggestion. The summary should exemplify the answers provided to the hypothesis and/or research objectives or acquired findings. The summary should not contain a repetition of research results and discussions, and it should instead contain a summation of research results and findings as expected in the research objective or hypothesis.
Managerial implication
Implications Managers must clearly state the implications of the findings at the managerial level.
Limitation and future research
The suggestions should present matters that will subsequently be conducted about the research’s ensuing concepts, and measurable limitations in the continuity of research
References
All references cited in the text of the article should be written in the bibliography section. It should include references obtained from primary sources (consisting of scientific journals amounting to 80% of the entire bibliography) that have been published in the last 10 (ten) years. The remaining 20% may include research articles or research reports (thesis, books, and other relevant publications).
Books
Anderson, B. (1983). Imagined Communities. London: Verso.
Book chapter
Smith, F. M., & Jones, W. (2004). The college student. In C. Wood & M. Meyer (Eds.), Cross-cultural education (pp. 75-105). London, Canada: MacMillan.
Journal Article
Lee, K. (2004). Reading and learning strategies: Recommendations for the 21st century. Journal of Developmental Education, 28(2), 2-15.
Journal article with DOI
Kusumaningrum, D. (2016). Interdependence versus truth and justice: lessons from reconciliation processes in Maluku Jurnal Ilmu Sosial dan Ilmu Politik, 20(1), 15. doi: 10.22146/jsp.17998
Smith, G. (2012). Barthes on Jamie: myth and the tv revolutionary. Journal of Media Practice, 13, 3-17. doi: 10.1386/jmpr.13.1.3_1
Journal article on the website
Austin, D. (2009). Fatty acids, breastfeeding and autism spectrum disorder. E-journal of Applied Psychology, 5(1), 49-52. Retrieved from
http://ojs/lib.swin.edu.au/
Newspapers article
Fung, M. (2006, December 12). Asthma rates increasing. Winnipeg Free Press, pp. C4.
Newspaper article on the website
Harris, M. (2011, August 16). Grades improve if classes start later, studies find. The Calgary Herald. Herald. Retrieved from http://www.calgaryherald.com/
Website
Buzan, T. (2007). Mind maps. Retrieved September 3, 2009,
from http://www.buzanworld.com/Mind_Maps.ht
Website document
TransCanada. (2006). Annual report. Retrieved
from http://www.transcanada.com/investor/annual_reports/2006 /media/pdf/TransCanada_2006_Annual_Report.pdf
Book translation
Mancusa, S., & Viola, A. (2015). Brilliant green: The surprising history and science of plant intelligence (J. Benham, Trans.). Washington, DC: Island Press.
Authors who publish with Journal Intelektual (JIN) agree to the following Open Access terms:
The name and the email address used in the Jurnal Intelektual only for the sake of journals published by LPPM Sekolah Tinggi Ilmu Ekonomi PPI and should not be used by anyone.
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Published by LPPM, Sekolah Tinggi Ilmu Ekonomi PPI