Journals

  • FourthIR Journal

    FourthIR Journal is a peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary academic journal dedicated to advancing rigorous scholarship on the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) and its transformative implications for economies, institutions, and societies. The journal provides a platform for theoretically grounded and methodologically robust research examining how emerging technologies are reshaping production systems, governance, labor markets, finance, education, and social structures.

    The Fourth Industrial Revolution—characterized by the convergence of artificial intelligence, machine learning, big data analytics, blockchain, advanced robotics, Internet of Things (IoT), biotechnology, fintech, and cyber-physical systems—has fundamentally altered the architecture of economic activity and institutional design. FourthIR Journal publishes high-quality empirical, theoretical, and policy-oriented contributions that interrogate these shifts with analytical precision.

    Scope and Focus

    The journal welcomes contributions in, but not limited to, the following domains:

    • Artificial intelligence and machine learning applications in economics and finance

    • Digital transformation of public administration and regulatory systems

    • Fintech, digital currencies, and financial inclusion

    • Industrial upgrading and smart manufacturing

    • Labor market restructuring, skills transitions, and human capital formation

    • Digital trade, platform economies, and global value chains

    • Cybersecurity, data governance, and digital ethics

    • Sustainability, green innovation, and climate-tech integration

    • 4IR adoption in developing and emerging economies

    • Digital entrepreneurship and innovation ecosystems

    Methodological Orientation

    FourthIR Journal prioritizes:

    • Advanced econometric modeling (e.g., panel data, causal inference, time series, structural modeling)

    • Machine learning and predictive analytics

    • Experimental and quasi-experimental designs

    • Policy simulation and scenario analysis

    • Cross-country comparative studies

    • Interdisciplinary frameworks integrating economics, management, public policy, and information systems

    Descriptive analyses without clear analytical contribution are discouraged. Submissions must demonstrate methodological rigor, theoretical grounding, and policy relevance.

    Audience

    The journal serves:

    • Academic researchers

    • Policy makers and regulatory authorities

    • Industry analysts and technology strategists

    • Development practitioners

    • Graduate scholars engaged in digital economy research

    Editorial Vision

    FourthIR Journal aims to bridge the gap between technological innovation and economic governance by publishing research that informs evidence-based policymaking and strategic decision-making in the digital age. Particular emphasis is placed on research emerging from developing and frontier markets, where 4IR dynamics intersect with structural transformation and institutional constraints.

    By fostering interdisciplinary dialogue and empirical rigor, FourthIR Journal seeks to contribute meaningfully to global scholarship on digital transformation and sustainable development in the era of the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

  • Journal of Evolving Sustainability

    Journal of Evolving Sustainability (JES) is a peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal dedicated to advancing rigorous scholarship on sustainability in dynamic economic, technological, demographic, and institutional contexts. The journal provides a platform for theoretically grounded and empirically robust research that examines how sustainability systems evolve in response to structural transformation, global shocks, and policy change.

    Aims and Scope

    JES focuses on sustainability as a process of structural adaptation, not merely an outcome. We publish high-quality empirical, methodological, and policy-oriented research that addresses:

    • Economic Sustainability
      Fiscal stability, debt dynamics, pension sustainability, demographic transitions, labor markets, and macroeconomic resilience.

    • Environmental and Climate Sustainability
      Climate adaptation, carbon pricing, natural resource governance, energy transition, environmental risk modeling, and sustainable industrialization.

    • Technological and Digital Sustainability
      Digital transformation, Industry 4.0, fintech ecosystems, digital infrastructure, cybersecurity resilience, AI governance, and sustainable innovation systems.

    • Institutional and Governance Sustainability
      Public finance management, tax compliance, regulatory quality, governance indicators, institutional reform, and state capacity.

    • Trade and Industrial Sustainability
      Regional integration, gravity-model trade analysis, industrial upgrading, global value chains, and structural transformation in developing economies.

    • Financial and Pension System Sustainability
      Long-run solvency, demographic pressures, intergenerational equity, and financial system robustness.

    Methodological Orientation

    JES prioritizes methodological rigor and reproducibility. Submissions are expected to demonstrate:

    • Advanced econometric modeling (e.g., ARDL, VECM, PPML gravity models, System GMM, Markov Switching models, panel data techniques)

    • Structural break analysis and regime-switching approaches

    • Microeconometric causal identification strategies

    • Policy simulation and scenario modeling

    • Machine learning applications with clear interpretability

    • Transparent data documentation and replicable code

    Both macro-level and micro-level datasets are welcome, including national statistical systems, international databases (e.g., IMF, World Bank, CEPII), enterprise surveys, and household survey data.

    Geographic and Developmental Focus

    While global in outlook, JES places particular emphasis on:

    • Emerging and developing economies

    • Regional integration blocs (e.g., COMESA, SADC, AfCFTA contexts)

    • Resource-dependent economies undergoing structural transformation

    • Economies facing demographic and fiscal transition pressures

    Comparative and cross-country studies are encouraged where they illuminate evolving sustainability dynamics.

    Types of Contributions

    • Original Research Articles

    • Policy Simulation Papers

    • Methodological Advances

    • Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses

    • Data and Replication Papers

    • Short Policy Briefs (by invitation)

    Editorial Philosophy

    JES promotes:

    • Analytical precision

    • Evidence-based policy implications

    • Clear identification strategies

    • Robustness and sensitivity testing

    • Avoidance of rhetorical excess or unsubstantiated claims

    The journal seeks contributions that move beyond descriptive sustainability narratives and instead provide causal inference, structural modeling, and forward-looking policy simulations grounded in credible data.

    Audience

    The journal serves academics, policymakers, multilateral institutions, development practitioners, sustainability researchers, and graduate scholars engaged in rigorous sustainability research.