Vision, Scope and Aims of the Journal
VISION OF THE JOURNAL
Our vision is "promoting our knowledge at loco-global exposure.”
SCOPE OF THE JOURNAL
The International Journal of Studies in Psychology (IJSPSY) (e-ISSN: 2710-2327, p-ISSN: 2710-2319) is a double blinded, peer-reviewed,fully open-access journal providing an advanced platform and opportunities for psychological-related research outputs. The accreditation of the IJSPSY often ensures that it adheres to ethical publishing practices, has a rigorous peer-review process, and contributes to advancing the field of psychology.
The IJSPSY relies on vast theoretical, practical, and thematically scholarly psychology, including unpublished research in human behavioural issues. These include indigenous psychology, mental well-being, community developmental psychology, educational psychology, psycholinguistics, and inclusive education.
The IJSPSY welcomes original, theoretical, conceptual, and empirical articles that offer a review and publication that disseminate the research findings in holistic areas of psychology such as Applied Psychology, Clinical Psychology, Industrial Psychology, Cognitive Neuroscience, Educational Psychology, Psycho-linguistic, Experimental Psychology, Critical Psychology, Indigenous Psychology, Social Psychology, etc. The IJSPSY focuses on creative innovations of research methodology at all stages and is committed to providing theoretical and practical experience for all those involved in these fields. The scholarly articles must be prepared, treated, and interpreted with the same academic rigour expected of academic research.
AIMS OF THE JOURNAL
The IJSPSY aims to discover cross and multidisciplinary creative and innovative theories, articles, methodologies, comprehensive reports, and case studies in Psychology by inviting scholars, professionals, librarians, and others to publish original research that addresses current issues informed by the best practices. The IJSPSY is an influential trend toward responsible research and innovation. The globalisation of research, the emergence and inclusion of new or previously excluded stakeholders, and the advent of open science are reshaping the scope and nature of scholarly publishing.