
Knowledge does not circulate evenly. In the academic study of Islam and Muslims, significant insights—particularly those written in non-dominant languages, produced in underrepresented regions, or embedded in theses, dissertations, and seminar work—often remain largely invisible beyond their immediate contexts. The Islamika Bulletin, a monthly research digest in Islamic Studies, is designed to address precisely this imbalance.Through carefully curated extended abstracts, the Bulletin brings research—published or unpublished, from any language and across disciplines—into a shared, globally accessible space. Whether originating from a thesis in Jakarta, a dissertation in Isfahan, a journal article in Islamabad, or a seminar paper in Sarajevo, each contribution is distilled into a clear, citable, and discoverable format that invites scholarly engagement.More than a repository of summaries, the Islamika Bulletin functions as a bridge: connecting ideas across linguistic, regional, and institutional boundaries. Where authors choose to make their work available as PrePrints, we assign a DOI, ensuring stable citation and making visibility academically actionable.Authors retain full rights to their work while gaining access to an international network of scholars across fields such as theology, anthropology, law, media, and education. This is not a substitute for peer-reviewed publication, but a strategic extension of it—a lightweight yet robust layer of scholarly infrastructure that enhances visibility and fosters intellectual exchange.At its core, the Islamika Bulletin aims to do two things at once: boost the visibility of research and expand its global reach—so that knowledge, wherever it originates, can travel further, be engaged more widely, and enter into the conversations it deserves.
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