Established in 2011 and hosted by Ubiquity.
Managed by Mongolian Academy of Sciences.
This website supports the online publication of Mongolian journals. For more information about MongoliaJOL and how to join the service see the About page.
Rajshahi University Journal of Arts & Law is the official journal of the University of Rajshahi that publishes research articles by faculty members of the University. Contributions to the Journal may be in English or in Bangla and must be previously unpublished articles containing original research that have not been submitted for publication elsewhere. All submissions are subject to peer review and to edition by the Editorial Board. Articles accepted for publication have to be by contributors who are entitled 20 copies of off-prints as well as a bound copy of the journal in which the article appear. The decision of the Editorial Board regarding publication is final and the copyright of published articles rests with the University of Rajshahi. Letter of Acceptance is given only after an article accepted finally.
Manuscripts submitted for publication must be in three copies, in neat and clear double-spaced typescript or electronic print-out on Letter size (8.5²´11²) white sheets with margins of 1.25² on all sides and pages consecutively numbered. The manuscript should have a title-page with the title of the article and the authors name, designation and contact address. The title should also be placed on the first page of the text of the article. The authors name or anything that may identify the author should not appear anywhere in the text proper. Submissions should be addressed to the secretary, Rajshahi University Journal of Arts & Law, Publication Office, University of Rajshahi, Rajshahi 6205.
An abstract in English must be provided within 150 words at the begining of the article. Notes and references in the text should be placed at the end of the article under the caption Notes and References. Notes should be numbered consecutively in the text in superscript (i.e., one half-line above the text). The note index number should be placed after all punctuation in a sentence, i.e., it should be placed after a comma or semicolon or the concluding full stop of the sentence. For articles in the Humanities the following is the prescribed form of documentation notes on their first occurrence:
Books: Published Books Should be cited by the authors name in normal order (first name first), title and subtitle (if any) of the book underlined or in italics, place of publication, publishers name, year of publication within brackets, page number (s) preceded by the abbreviation p. or pp..
Example : 1Edward W. Said, Covering Islam: How the Media and the Experts Determine How We See the Rest of the World (New York: Pantheon Books, 1981). p. 155.
If the book has two or three authors the names of all the authors should be mentioned. When there are more than two or three authors, the name of one author should be followed by the abbreviation et al (meaning and others). If the book is one of a series, the series title should be mentioned after the title of the book. In the case of an edited version of a text, the editors name preceded by the abbreviation ed. should follow the title of the book. If it is a translation, the translators name should follow the title of the book. If it is a translation, the translators name should follow the title, preceded by the abbreviation trans. Reprints should be identified by the date of original publication, which should precede the publication data within brackets. The following is an example: A.P. Thrnton, The Imperial Idea and Its Enemies: A Study in British Power (1959; London: Macmillan, 1985), p. 30. The citation here is to a 1985 reprint of a book originally published in 1959.
Periodicals: Author or authors name(s) in normal order (first name first), title of article in quotation marks, title of periodical underlined or in italics, volume and/or issue number, year of issue within brackets, page number without the abbreviation p. for page.
Example of reference to an article in a journal with continuous pagination throughout the volume: 1Nancy Fraser, The French Derrideans: Politicising Deconstruction or Deconstucting Politics. New Gorman Critique 33 (1984), 127-54.
Example of reference to an article from a journal which paginates each issue separately or which numbers only issues:2 Abdul Karim, Murshid Quli Khans Regulations Regarding Price and Supply of Rice, Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bangladesh 29, No. 1 (June, 1984), 1-20.
When a book or periodical has been identified by full reference in note, subsequent citations should be shortened. Subsequent references should contain only the authors last name and the page numbers. If a subsequent reference occurs many pages after the first one then the citation should be by authors last name, shortened title of the book or article, and page numbers. For example, subsequent reference to the citation in the first note above should be: 2Said, p. 21 or 3Said, Covering Islam, P. 32. Abbreviations such as op. cit., loc. cit., or ibid., Should not be used.
A style sheet containing more information on manuscript conventions is available on request from the Publication Office, University of Rajshahi, Rajshahi 6205, Bangladesh.
All submissions must meet the following requirements.
Bangladesh Journals Online (BanglaJOL) is a member of the Ubiquity Partner Network coordinated by Ubiquity Press. According to the EU definitions, BanglaJOL is the data controller, and Ubiquity Press are the service providers and data processors. Ubiquity Press provide the technical platform and some publishing services to BanglaJOL and operate under the principle of data minimisation where only the minimal amount of personal data that is required to carry out a task is obtained.
More information on the type of data that is required can be found in Ubiquity Press’ privacy policy below.
We take seriously our duty to process your personal data in a fair and transparent way. We collect and manage user data according to the following Privacy Policy. This document is part of our Terms of Service, and by using the press portal, affiliated journals, book, conference and repository websites (the “Websites”), you agree to the terms of this Privacy Policy and the Terms of Service. Please read the Terms of Service in their entirety, and refer to those for definitions and contacts.
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Personal information is only used to deliver the services provided by the publisher. Personal data is not shared externally except for author names, affiliations, emails, and links to ORCiD and social media accounts (if provided) in published articles and books which are displayed as part of the article/book and shared externally to indexes and databases. If a journal operates under open peer review then the reviewer details are published alongside the reviewer details.
1.1 what data we collect
1.2 why we collect the data
1.3 what we do (and don’t do) with the data
1.4 what to do if you want to get a copy of your data, or want your data to be removed
2.1 what data we collect
2.2 why we collect the data
2.3 what we do (and don’t do) with the data
2.4 why we store the data
2.5 what to do if you want to get a copy of your data, or want your data to be removed
3.1 what data we collect
3.2 why we collect the data
3.3 what we do (and don’t do) with the data
3.4 what to do if you want to get a copy of your data, or want your data to be removed
4.1 what data we collect
4.2 why we collect the data
4.3 what we do (and don’t do) with the data
4.5 what to do if you want to get a copy of your data, or want your data to be removed
5.1 what data we collect
5.2 why we collect and store the data, and for how long
5.3 what we do (and don’t do) with the data
5.4 what to do if you want to get a copy of your data or want your data to be removed
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(Updated: 18 May 2018)
Established in 2011 and hosted by Ubiquity.
Managed by Mongolian Academy of Sciences.
This website supports the online publication of Mongolian journals. For more information about MongoliaJOL and how to join the service see the About page.