As of Spring 2021 (Issue 102), all submitted manuscripts must comply with the following submission guidelines.
(Click here for the editorial and submission guidelines prior to Issue 102.)The Journal of Liberal Thought is a peer-reviewed academic journal indexed in TR DİZİN (ULAKBİM) and published quarterly.
The journal publishes original articles, translations (with permission from the author and the publisher), abridgements, critical editions, book and symposium reviews, and similar academic contributions.
The publication languages of the journal are Turkish and English. For Turkish submissions, spelling, punctuation, and abbreviations must comply with the Turkish Language Association’s Online Dictionary and Writing Rules. Submissions must be scientifically rigorous, clearly written, and logically structured.
All articles must include a Turkish and English title, abstract, and keywords; section headings within the text; and a list of references. The full length of the manuscript, including all these elements, should be between 4,000 and 10,000 words.
The abstracts in Turkish and English should each be between 100 and 150 words, and the keywords should consist of 3 to 7 words.
The author’s name should appear in bold italics, 11-point font, right-aligned directly below the article title. The author’s academic title, ORCID number, institutional affiliation, and e-mail address should be provided in a footnote marked with an asterisk (*) and set in 9-point font. Any additional explanatory notes should be presented as numbered footnotes within the text or at the bottom of the page.
The manuscript should be written in Times New Roman, 11-point font, with 1.5 line spacing. Footnotes should be single-spaced and set in 9-point font.
The manuscript file must be named after the article title—using English characters and capitalizing only the first letter of each word. Files named “Liberal Düşünce” or submitted under the author’s name will be returned without review.
Book review manuscripts should be between 1,000 and 3,000 words. At the discretion of the editorial board, reviews exceeding this limit may be accepted depending on the significance of the work being reviewed.
The review heading should include the book’s title, author, place of publication, publisher, year of publication, and ISBN number. The reviewer’s name should appear in bold italics, 11-point font, right-aligned under the review title; academic title, institutional affiliation, and e-mail address should be included in a footnote (9-point font, marked with an asterisk).
The review must go beyond summary and offer a critical evaluation. The reviewer may agree or disagree with the book’s arguments, identify strengths and weaknesses, or assess its contribution to the field. The author’s perspective should be clearly articulated.
A strong review should highlight key points of the book and critically engage with them. It should generally follow a structure consisting of an introduction, discussion of the book’s significance, summary, critical analysis, and conclusion.
The first line of each paragraph should be indented 1.25 cm; spacing before and after paragraphs should be set to 3 nk. Text should be justified and spaced at 1.5 lines. Articles should follow a single-level heading format. The titles of Introduction, Subheadings, Conclusion, and References should be in bold. Page numbers must be placed in the bottom right corner.
In-text Citations and References
Citations
Citations and references must follow the APA (American Psychological Association) 6th edition style. Detailed information is available at: http://www.tk.org.tr/APA/apa_2.pdf. Citations must be written in the same font size as the manuscript. In-text citations should appear in parentheses after the quoted material: (Author’s Last Name, Year: Page Number). Tables and figures should also conform to APA 6.0 guidelines.
Explanatory notes may be given as footnotes, but sources may not be cited via footnotes or endnotes.
Direct quotations shorter than three lines should be included within the text. Quotations longer than three lines should be placed in a separate paragraph, single-spaced, 11-point font, and indented 1.25 cm from both sides.
Single Author: (Yayla, 2017: 109)
Two Authors: (Balaam & Dillman, 2015: 545)
More than Two Authors: (Dursun, Tekiner & Tekin, 2016: 89) or (Dursun et al., 2016: 89)
Institution as Author: (Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey [TÜBİTAK], 2013); subsequent citations: (TÜBİTAK, 2013)
Chapter in Edited Book: (Beriş, 2017: 113)
No Author: (Writing Scientific Articles, 2000: 45)
Standards: (TS-40561, 1985: 6)
Web Sources without Author: (www.hurfikirler.com, 2017)
Multiple Works by Same Author in Different Years: (Yayla, 2015: 220; 2017: 130)
Different Authors with Same Last Name: (A. Aslan, 2000: 6; B. Aslan, 2010: 71)
Multiple Sources: (Aytekin, 2004: 71; Küçük, 2008: 87)
Multiple Works by Same Author in the Same Year: (Yayla, 2017a: 165), (Yayla, 2017b: 140)
Secondary Sources: (cited in Hanioğlu, 2012: 40) or (as cited in Hanioğlu, 2006: 40)
References should be listed alphabetically by the authors’ last names. In entries with two authors, use “and”; for more than two, separate names with commas and use “and” before the last name.
All bibliographic information must be complete. For translated works, indicate the translator. Foreign-language sources should retain their original bibliographic format.
Example entries are listed under categories such as:
Books (single author, multiple authors, institutional authors)
Translations
Edited volumes and book chapters
Journal articles (with one or multiple authors)
Conference proceedings
Reports (with or without author)
Theses
Legal documents and court rulings
Newspapers and magazines (with or without author)
Online sources
Multimedia (films, TV, CDs, videos)