Author Guidelines
First, article submissions should be research-based. Generally, the papers are composed of at the maximum of 9.000 words.
Second, articles are evaluated using some combination of the following criteria:
(1) How useful and original are the ideas presented?;
(2) How thoroughly does the author consider implications for the scholarship, and also for teaching and learning in sociology and anthropology?;
(3) How well developed is the basic analytical point?;
(4) Is there sociological theory and/or analysis?;
(5) How thoroughly and accurately does the author ground the paper in the literature?;
(6) Are there articles in KOMUNITAS: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDONESIAN SOCIETY AND CULTURE that the author also should cite?;
(7) How extensively does the author extend previous ideas and bring some intellectual closure to the topic?;
(8) How sound is the methodology and how accurately do the presented results re􀄘 ect the data?;
(9) How well written is the paper?;
(10) How well integrated is the paper?;
(11) How well organized is the paper?;
(12) Does the manuscript discuss the social context of the research (e.g., size of classes, content of classes, type of institutions involved, any prerequisites, etc.)?
Third, For papers written in Bahasa Indonesia, the manuscript should follow this systematic:
JUDUL, IDENTITAS PENULIS, INSTITUSI DAN ALAMAT LENGKAP, ABSTRAK, PENDAHULUAN, METODE PENELITIAN, HASIL DAN PEMBAHASAN, SIMPULAN, DAFTAR PUSTAKA.
Fourth, articles written in Bahasa Indonesia should be provided with English translation of the article. The abstracts are also written in two languages: Bahasa Indonesia and English.
Fifth, KOMUNITAS: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDONESIAN SOCIETY AND CULTURE encourages the manuscripts submitted should have journal articles in the references. Writers should read articles in KOMUNITAS: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDONESIAN SOCIETY AND CULTURE for citation.
Sixth, KOMUNITAS: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDONESIAN SOCIETY AND CULTURE uses the following Harvard Citation Style
IN-TEXT CITATIONS
Identify each source at the appropriate point in the text by the last name of the author or authors, year of publication, and pagination (if needed). Examples:
Glaser and Strauss (1969) discussed the importance….
Declining enrollments pose a threat to the faculty (Huber 1985, p. 375-82)
Merton (1940, 1945) argues….
In the fi rst in-text citation of items with four or more names, use the fi rst author’s last name plus the words “et al.†List all names only when “et al.†would cause confusion. In citations with three or fewer authors, all authors’ last names should be listed the fi rst time the reference is cited.
When two authors in your reference list have the same last name, use identifying initial, as in in (J. Smith 1990).
When you cite more than one source, the preference is that authors alphabetize citations within parentheses, as follows:
..issues that both faculty and students are expected to address (DeMartini 1983; Lynch and Smith 1985; Rippertoe 1977).Â
Komunitas uses Harvard Citation Style for organizing references. Below are examples of how Havard Citation Style are written:
Journal:
Shirazi, T. (2010) 'Successful teaching placements in secondary schools: achieving QTS practical handbooks', European Journal of Teacher Education, 33(3), pp. 323-326. Available at: https://doi-org.libezproxy.open.ac.uk/10.1080/02619761003602246
Book:
Bell, J. (2014) Doing your research project. Maidenhead: Open University Press
Goddard, J. and Barrett, S. (2015) The health needs of young people leaving care. Norwich: University of East Anglia, School of Social Work and Psychosocial Studies.