Journal History

About

Wawasan Nusantara: Journal of Religion, Humanity and Culture is an Open Access international, peer-reviewed journal publishing high-quality, original research. Please see the journal's Focus & Scope for information about its focus and peer-review policy. Open Access means you can publish your research so it is free to access online as soon as it is published, meaning anyone can read (and cite) your work. Please see our guide to Open Access for more information. Many funders mandate publishing your research open access; you can check open access funder policies and mandates here. There are only research results from different fields that are published in this journal. The research is only about how to critically understand religious, cultural, and humanities issues in a multicultural society (Moderasi Beragama) in Nusantara (Indonesia, Burnai Darussalam, Malaysia, Thailand, and Singapore). Under the auspices of Rumah Moderasi Beragama and Institut Agama Islam Negeri (IAIN) Kendari, academics and researchers professionally manage this journal.

Focus & Scope

✓ Religious Studies:

Religious studies discuss the problems of the philosophy of religion as they arise out of classical and contemporary discussions and from varied religious traditions of society and culture. The key to understanding the fundamental motivations for the behaviour of human groups lies in the knowledge of religious beliefs and practices. The study of scriptural reception, tolerance, and religious ideology are a few examples.

✓ Cultural Studies:

The Cultures studies include the study of ethnicity, gender, race, ideology, nationality, etc. The field draws from sociology, anthropology, politics, history, economics, philosophy, literature, and communications.

✓ Humanities Studies:

The humanities studies can be defined as a field of academia that examines how meaning is created in social structures with adherence to class, languages and literatures, the arts, history, and philosophy. The humanities are sometimes organized as a school or administrative division in many colleges and universities in the United States.