Focus and Scope

CIVIKA: A Multidisciplinary Journal of Civic Education and Social Studies is a peer-reviewed scientific journal published by the Department of Civic Education, Faculty of Teacher Training and Education, Singaperbangsa Karawang University. This journal serves as a scientific forum for researchers, academics, teachers, and practitioners to disseminate research findings, theoretical studies, and scholarly discussions in the fields of citizenship education and social sciences.

The scope of the CIVICA Journal encompasses the social sciences, education, citizenship, and the humanities, with an emphasis on theoretical issues and rigorous empirical reporting. Its articles reflect a variety of methodologies and disciplines, including the social sciences, education, citizenship, law, politics, sociology, history, and culture.

CIVICA is published twice a year, in June and December. The journal is committed to promoting multidisciplinary perspectives and fostering the development of knowledge that contributes to education and social development at the local, national, and global levels.

In addition, the Civica Journal also publishes research and studies in the following fields:

  1. Pancasila and Civic Education – Focusing on national defense, character development through education, curriculum, learning resources, technology-based media, and learning assessment.
  2. Politics and Law – Analyzing public policy, regulations, politics, and the rights and obligations of citizens.
  3. Philosophy, Ethics, and Social Sciences – Emphasizing values and ethics as the foundation for the development of civic character.
  4. Socio-Cultural Studies – Covers multiculturalism, spirituality, norms, traditions, art, language, social interaction, and cultural dynamics.

"This integration of interdisciplinary perspectives constructs a holistic analytical framework for unraveling the complexities of social discourse and civic education. This methodological strength not only elaborates on the behavioral modalities of agents of change but also maps their structural implications in terms of causality on a macro scale, encompassing national sociopolitical dimensions all the way to the international sphere."