Writing Guidelines

Andalas Journal of Accounting & Governance (JAGA) Articles

  1. Articles written for JAGA include thoughts and research results in the fields of Accounting and Governance.
  2. Articles written for JAGA are articles that are not being submitted to other publications/journals and have not been published in other journals, as evidenced by a Statement Letter.
  3. Articles must be submitted in two separate files, namely the manuscript without any identifying information and the title page containing the author's identity, affiliation, abstract, and keywords with optional JEL classification.
  4. The article should not exceed 7,000 words and should be written in Times New Roman 12 font.
  5. The cover page should include the title and the author's identity. Submissions should be accompanied by a curriculum vitae.

JAGA Article Writing Standards

Before submitting your article, please prepare it using the following template, which can be downloaded here

The article structure must consist of at least the following sections:

  1. Abstract, Keywords: Written in proper Indonesian or English in one paragraph starting at the 5th line with no more than 200 words. The abstract and keywords are written in italics and bold. The maximum number of keywords is 5 words.
  2. Introduction: The introduction should include the background of the research and the research objectives in a concise and compact manner. Theoretical support does not need to be included in this section, but similar research that has been conducted can be stated.
  3. Literature Review: This section contains the theories used as the fundamental basis by the researcher in conducting the research. In this section, the author is expected to provide a critical review of the theories used in their scientific work.
  4. Research Methods: This section describes the type of research used, the population and sample, and the sampling techniques used. In addition, the data collection methods and data analysis methods relevant to the published research are also explained in this section.
  5. Analysis and Discussion: This section contains data (in summary form), data analysis, and interpretation of the results. The discussion is carried out by linking empirical studies or theories for interpretation. In terms of the proportion of the paper, this section should take up the largest proportion, reaching 50% or more. This section can be divided into several subchapters, but it is not necessary to include numbering.
  6. Conclusion and Recommendations (if any): This section contains the conclusions of a study. The conclusions are answers to the research objectives, not a repetition of the theory or a summary of the discussion. Recommendations are made based on the research findings and are intended to develop, follow up on, or apply the research results, both theoretically and practically.
  7. References: References must be arranged alphabetically. References with the same author name are arranged based on the year of publication. Publication titles must be written in full. For two or more authors, all authors' names must be written. Journal names are written in italics and magazine/journal abbreviations are written according to the conventions used by each journal.

 

Example of Bibliography Writing :

 Bibliography in the form of magazines/scientific journals/periodical proceedings

Charvatova. D. (2006). Relationship between Communication Effectiveness and The Extent of Communication Among Organizational Units. International Journal of Human and Social Sciences 1:1, 32-34.

 Bibliography in the form of book titles

Sekaran, Uma (2006), Research Methods for Business, Second Edition, New York: John Wiley.

 Library in the form of a thesis

Suhartini (1995). Analisis Faktor-Faktor yang Mempengaruhi Intensi Peningkatan Kinerja Dosen pada Perguruan Tinggi Swasta Daerah Istimewa Yogyakarta. Thesis; Surabaya, Program Pascasarjana Unair.

 Bibliography from articles published in non-periodicals

Jahr, V., & Teichler, U. (2002). Employment and work of former mobile students. In U. Teichler (Ed.) ERASMUS in the SOCRATES programme, finding of an evaluation study (117-135). Bonn: Lemmens

 Bibliography in the form of online documents

Patria, B. (2006). Factor analysis on the characteristics of occupation. Retrieved February 14, 2006 from https://inparametric.com/bhinablog/download /factoranalysis_patria.pdf.