Submission Guidelines
Please download the abstract submission form and email the completed form to [email protected]
*Papers presented at the conference will be eligible for review for possible publication in KEMANUSIAAN : The Asian Journal of Humanities
(a Scopus indexed journal) subject to timely submission of the full paper to the conference committee.
Manuscript Submission Guidelines
Font and spacing: Please use Times New Roman 12 and all submissions should be typed in double spacing (including notes and references).
Length: The manuscript should be between 5,000 – 6,000 words excluding the abstract and references.
Quotations: Quoted words, phrases and sentences should be enclosed in double quotation marks. Quotations within quotations and glosses should be enclosed in single quotation marks. Quotations may be either run in or in the case of quotations which are four lines or longer – set off from the text as block quotations. Italicize non-English terms or phrases in the manuscript.
Figures, tables and illustrations: These should be included as they are mentioned in the text.
Notes: Notes should be kept to a minimum. Use endnotes, not footnotes. All notes should be numbered in sequence, typed in double spacing and placed at the end of the main text before the references.
References and text citations: References should appear in alphabetical order and only those mentioned in the body of the manuscript should be included in the reference list. Referencing should follow the author-date system. Author-date citations in the text must agree exactly, in both name and date, with the corresponding entries in the reference list and there must be an entry for every text citation. It is the author's responsibility to ensure such agreement as well as the accuracy of the reference. Please refer to examples below:
In-text citation
(Joseph 2004)
(Joseph 2004, 121)
(Hollingsworth and Sockett 1994b)
Book
Joseph, J. E. 2004. Language and identity: National, ethnic, religious. Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan.
McEnery, T., R. Xiao and Y. Tono. 2006. Corpus-based language studies. Oxford: Routledge.
If several works by the same author are cited, his/her last name should be systematically repeated in the references.
Article in Journal
Emerson, D. K. 2005. What do the blind-sided see? Reapproaching regionalism in
Southeast Asia. The Pacific Review 18(1): 1–21.
Contribution in a multiauthor book
Tan, L. E. 1990. Dasar pendidikan dalam konteks dekolonialisasi: Semenanjung Tanah Melayu, 1945–55. In Kolonialisme di Malaysia dan negara-negara lain, ed. Cheah Boon Kheng and Abu Talib Ahmad, 201–236. Kuala Lumpur: Fajar Bakti.
Please download the abstract submission form and email the completed form to [email protected]
*Papers presented at the conference will be eligible for review for possible publication in KEMANUSIAAN : The Asian Journal of Humanities
(a Scopus indexed journal) subject to timely submission of the full paper to the conference committee.
Manuscript Submission Guidelines
- In order to be considered for publication in the special issue of KEMANUSIAAN : The Asian Journal of Humanities, full manuscripts should be sent electronically to Professor Dr. Shakila Abdul Manan ([email protected]) as an attachment. The deadline for submission is 31 August 2016.
- Papers that are submitted must be in line with the theme of the conference that is "Interactions between the Global and the Local"
- All manuscripts that are submitted must be written in English.
- Each presenter must submit only one conference paper to be considered for publication in this special issue.
- To facilitate the review process, we request that authors observe the following:·
- Only the top page of the manuscript carries the title of the article, name of author(s), institutional address and email of its author(s).
- All manuscripts must be accompanied with an abstract of approximately 200 words and a list of 5 keywords/phrases.
Font and spacing: Please use Times New Roman 12 and all submissions should be typed in double spacing (including notes and references).
Length: The manuscript should be between 5,000 – 6,000 words excluding the abstract and references.
Quotations: Quoted words, phrases and sentences should be enclosed in double quotation marks. Quotations within quotations and glosses should be enclosed in single quotation marks. Quotations may be either run in or in the case of quotations which are four lines or longer – set off from the text as block quotations. Italicize non-English terms or phrases in the manuscript.
Figures, tables and illustrations: These should be included as they are mentioned in the text.
Notes: Notes should be kept to a minimum. Use endnotes, not footnotes. All notes should be numbered in sequence, typed in double spacing and placed at the end of the main text before the references.
References and text citations: References should appear in alphabetical order and only those mentioned in the body of the manuscript should be included in the reference list. Referencing should follow the author-date system. Author-date citations in the text must agree exactly, in both name and date, with the corresponding entries in the reference list and there must be an entry for every text citation. It is the author's responsibility to ensure such agreement as well as the accuracy of the reference. Please refer to examples below:
In-text citation
(Joseph 2004)
(Joseph 2004, 121)
(Hollingsworth and Sockett 1994b)
Book
Joseph, J. E. 2004. Language and identity: National, ethnic, religious. Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan.
McEnery, T., R. Xiao and Y. Tono. 2006. Corpus-based language studies. Oxford: Routledge.
If several works by the same author are cited, his/her last name should be systematically repeated in the references.
Article in Journal
Emerson, D. K. 2005. What do the blind-sided see? Reapproaching regionalism in
Southeast Asia. The Pacific Review 18(1): 1–21.
Contribution in a multiauthor book
Tan, L. E. 1990. Dasar pendidikan dalam konteks dekolonialisasi: Semenanjung Tanah Melayu, 1945–55. In Kolonialisme di Malaysia dan negara-negara lain, ed. Cheah Boon Kheng and Abu Talib Ahmad, 201–236. Kuala Lumpur: Fajar Bakti.