About the Journal

Veritas: Journal of Sociology and Social Reality is established as an academic platform committed to unveiling social realities through rigorous sociological inquiry. The journal emphasizes critical thinking and methodological diversity to capture the complexity of contemporary societies.

The journal encourages interdisciplinary dialogue while maintaining sociology as its core discipline. By integrating qualitative, quantitative, and mixed-method approaches, Veritas supports comprehensive analyses of social phenomena across different contexts.

With a strong orientation toward regional and global social issues, Veritas provides space for scholarship that highlights voices, experiences, and social challenges often underrepresented in mainstream academic discourse. Comparative and contextual studies are particularly welcomed.

Through its publications, Veritas: Journal of Sociology and Social Reality aims to contribute meaningfully to academic debates, inform policy and practice, and strengthen sociological knowledge that responds to real-world social transformations.

 

Focus and Scope

Veritas: Journal of Sociology and Social Reality focuses on critical and reflective studies of society grounded in sociological perspectives. The journal prioritizes works that contribute conceptually and empirically to the understanding of social dynamics, inequalities, and transformations, particularly in the context of the Global South.

Social Theory and Social Change

This section addresses classical and contemporary sociological theories and their application to social change. Topics include modernization, globalization, postcolonial theory, digital society, and transformations in social values and norms.

Institutions, Power, and Inequality

The journal welcomes analyses of social institutions such as family, education, religion, economy, and the state. Special attention is given to power relations, social stratification, gender, class, ethnicity, and policy impacts on marginalized communities.

Everyday Life and Social Reality

This area explores lived experiences and micro-level social interactions. Research may focus on identity construction, community life, urban and rural realities, work, migration, and cultural practices as experienced in daily life.