Call for papers/Topics
Full Articles/ Reviews/ Shorts Papers/ Abstracts are welcomed in the following research fields:
Foundational & Independent Topics
These areas focus on the distinct methodologies and core subject matters unique to each broad discipline.
1. The Creative and Performing Arts
The study, creation, and critique of human expression through physical, visual, and auditory media.
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Visual Arts: Drawing, painting, sculpture, printmaking, photography, and the evolution of art media.
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Performing Arts: Theater arts, acting methodologies, dance choreography, ethnomusicology, and music theory.
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Design and Architecture: Interior design, industrial design, landscape architecture, and sustainable urban design.
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Art History and Criticism: Formal analysis, iconography, historical art movements (e.g., Renaissance, Modernism), and curatorial studies.
2. The Humanities
The critical, analytical, and speculative study of the human condition and cultural records.
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Philosophy and Ethics: Metaphysics, epistemology, logic, moral philosophy, and political philosophy.
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History: Historiography, ancient civilizations, medieval history, modern global conflicts, and oral history methods.
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Literature and Creative Writing: Literary theory, comparative literature, poetry, narrative structure, and genre studies.
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Linguistics: Phonetics, syntax, semantics, historical linguistics, and language acquisition.
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Religious Studies: Comparative religion, mythology, sacred texts, and the sociology of religious movements.
3. The Social Sciences
The scientific and empirical study of human society, social relationships, and behavioral patterns.
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Sociology: Social stratification, institutional structures, deviance, socialization, and urban sociology.
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Psychology: Cognitive processes, developmental psychology, abnormal behavior, neuroscience, and personality theory.
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Anthropology: Cultural anthropology, archaeology, biological anthropology, and ethnographic field methods.
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Political Science: Comparative politics, international relations, political behavior, and public policy analysis.
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Human Geography: Demography, spatial analysis, geopolitics, and cultural landscapes.
Interrelated & Integrated Topics
These fields represent the spaces where the arts, humanities, and social sciences merge to analyze culture, power, identity, and expression.
1. Cultural Studies and Critical Theory
The intersection of literature, sociology, history, and philosophy used to examine power dynamics within culture.
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Gender and Sexuality Studies: The social construction of gender, feminist theory, queer theory, and the history of civil rights movements.
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Postcolonial and Decolonial Studies: The cultural, economic, and psychological legacy of colonialism analyzed through literature, history, and sociology.
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Media and Communication Studies: How mass media, digital communication, and journalism shape public perception and societal values.
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Popular Culture Analysis: The study of film, television, fashion, and internet culture using sociological and semiotic frameworks.
2. Cognitive Humanities and Behavioral Arts
The space where the human mind, social behavior, and artistic creation overlap.
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Psychology of Art and Creativity: The cognitive mechanisms behind artistic expression, visual perception, and the therapeutic impact of art.
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Philosophy of Mind and Cognitive Science: The philosophical debate over consciousness, intentionality, and artificial intelligence, integrated with psychological data.
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Sociolinguistics and Psycholinguistics: How language structures social identity and how the human brain processes linguistic communication.
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Behavioral History and Psychohistory: The application of psychological theories to explain historical motivations, mass movements, and political leadership.
3. Digital Humanities and Social Informatics
The integration of digital tools and computing methods to analyze humanistic and social data.
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Computational Linguistics and Text Mining: Using data science to analyze massive literary corpora or social media discourse for cultural trends.
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Digital Archiving and Public History: The preservation of historical artifacts and cultural heritage through digital mapping and interactive public exhibits.
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Spatial Humanities: Utilizing Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to map historical events, literary settings, or demographic changes over time.
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Ethics of Technology: The philosophical and sociological critique of data privacy, algorithmic bias, and the societal impact of digital transformation.
4. Environmental Humanities and Social Ecology
The convergence of philosophy, history, and social science to study human relationships with the natural world.
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Environmental History: How human societies have reshaped, and been reshaped by, ecosystems and natural resources throughout time.
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Eco-Criticism and Environmental Literature: The analysis of how nature and environmental crises are represented in art, literature, and film.
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Environmental Sociology and Justice: The study of how social inequalities dictate access to clean environments and clean resources.
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Environmental Ethics: The philosophical questioning of human responsibility toward non-human life and future generations




