Call for papers/Topics
All Abstracts, Reviews, short articles, Full articles, Posters are welcomed related with any of the following research fields:
Foundational & Independent Topics
These disciplines focus on specific lenses of human expression, communication, history, and behavior.
1. Literature
The study of written, oral, and visual texts as artistic and cultural expressions.
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Literary Genres: Prose fiction, poetry, drama, creative nonfiction, and graphic narratives.
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Literary Periods and Movements: Classical, Medieval, Renaissance, Enlightenment, Romanticism, Realism, Modernism, and Postmodernism.
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Literary Theory and Criticism: Formalism, psychoanalytic criticism, Marxist theory, feminist theory, postcolonialism, and queer theory.
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Comparative Literature: Cross-cultural textual analysis, translation studies, and thematic transformations across geographies.
2. Linguistics and Languages
The scientific study of language structure, development, and use.
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Structural Linguistics: Phonetics (speech sounds), phonology (sound systems), morphology (word structure), syntax (sentence structure), and semantics (meaning).
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Historical Linguistics: Language evolution, language families, etymology, and language change over time.
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Sociolinguistics: Dialects, sociolects, language attitudes, code-switching, and the relationship between language and identity.
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Psycholinguistics and Neurolinguistics: Language acquisition (first and second language), sentence processing, and language localization in the brain.
3. History
The study and interpretation of the human past through primary and secondary sources.
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Chronological and Regional History: Ancient, medieval, early modern, and contemporary history across global regions.
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Historiography: The philosophy and methodology of historical writing and how historical interpretations change.
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Social and Cultural History: The daily lives of ordinary people, gender roles, popular culture, and history from below.
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Political and Diplomatic History: The evolution of states, empires, international treaties, warfare, and governance.
4. Philosophy
The critical investigation of fundamental questions regarding existence, knowledge, values, and reason.
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Epistemology: The nature, scope, and limits of knowledge and belief.
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Metaphysics: The nature of reality, existence, time, mind, and matter.
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Ethics and Moral Philosophy: Normative ethics, meta-ethics, and applied ethics (e.g., bioethics, environmental ethics).
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Logic: The principles of valid reasoning, formal logic, and informal fallacies.
Interrelated & Social Science Topics
These fields naturally blend humanistic inquiry with empirical, behavioral, and structural social sciences.
1. Anthropology and Archaeology
The study of human beings, their ancestors, and cultures across time and space.
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Cultural Anthropology: Ethnography, kinship systems, rituals, belief systems, and globalization.
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Linguistic Anthropology: How language shapes social life, identity, and cultural worldview.
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Biological Anthropology: Human evolution, primatology, and forensic anthropology.
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Archaeology: Material culture analysis, excavation methodologies, and the preservation of cultural heritage.
2. Sociology and Social Theory
The study of society, social institutions, social patterns, and human social behavior.
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Social Stratification and Inequality: Class dynamics, systemic racism, gender disparities, and social mobility.
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Sociology of Institutions: The study of family structures, education systems, religious organizations, and the state.
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Urban and Rural Sociology: Community development, urbanization, gentrification, and spatial inequalities.
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Demography: Population trends, migration patterns, aging, and birth/mortality rates.
3. Political Science and International Relations
The study of power, governance, political behavior, and global systems.
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Political Theory: Philosophical inquiries into justice, liberty, authority, and democracy.
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Comparative Politics: Analyzing and comparing domestic political systems, constitutions, and electoral mechanisms across countries.
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International Relations: Geopolitics, foreign policy, international law, and global organizations (e.g., the UN).
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Public Policy and Administration: Bureaucratic management, policy formulation, and the execution of state programs.
4. Psychology and Behavioral Sciences
The scientific study of the human mind and behavior.
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Cognitive Psychology: Memory, attention, perception, problem-solving, and decision-making.
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Social Psychology: Group dynamics, prejudice, conformity, interpersonal relationships, and social cognition.
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Developmental Psychology: Psychological shifts across the lifespan, from infancy to old age.
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Abnormal and Clinical Psychology: Mental health disorders, therapeutic frameworks, and psychiatric diagnoses.
5. Media, Communication, and Cultural Studies
The intersection of technology, human interaction, and cultural production.
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Mass Communication: Journalism, broadcasting, media ethics, and the history of print and digital media.
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Digital Media and Technology Studies: Social media algorithms, digital cultures, virtual identity, and human-computer interaction.
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Cultural Studies: The analysis of power dynamics within popular culture, consumerism, mass media, and subcultures.
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Rhetoric and Public Discourse: The art of persuasion, political rhetoric, and communication theory





