Journal of Religion and Decoloniality
Journal Initial: JRD
e-ISSN: 3110-1305
DOI Prefix: 10.24260 by ![]()
Publisher: Elkuator Research and Publication
Frequency: Semi-Annual (June and December)
Speed: 30 Days Avg. from Submission to First Decision
Editor-in-Chief: Bibi Suprianto
Citation Analysis: Google Scholar | Dimensions
Journal of Religion and Decoloniality (JRD) is a peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary academic journal exploring the intersections of religion, spirituality, and decolonial thought. It explores how religious traditions, theological frameworks, and spiritual practices are implicated and can respond to histories and structures of coloniality. See our Focus and Scope.
JRD seeks to foreground perspectives that challenge dominant epistemologies and uplift marginalized, indigenous communities and subaltern ways of knowing. It is particularly interested in contributions that interrogate the entanglements of religion with power, race, gender, and global systems of domination, as well as those that offer emancipatory, decolonial alternatives. JRD provides a critical platform for scholars, activists, and practitioners who engage with religious traditions, institutions, and epistemologies through decolonial lenses. The journal is published under Elkuator Research and Publication.
Journal cover contains the word ᨄᨘᨕ (Puang), a Buginese term for "God" in the indigenous literature, and ornamented with the local design of Batik Lontara. The cover image of a peacock is based on the sketch in the diary of the Maqdanrang of Bone, Ahmad al-Salih Syamsuddin (ca. 1790-1800), British Library, Or. 8154, f. 7v, which symbolizes a local-creative rendering of divine aesthetics.
Current Issue
This issue has been available online since December, 21, 2025, for the regular issue of December 2025. All articles have successfully published five articles and one book review in its inaugural issue (Vol. 1, No. 2, 2025) were authored and co-authored by nine authors from five countries (Germany, Indonesia, China, Philippines, and United States of America).
Articles
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Book Do Not Kill, the Readers Do So: Reflections on the Violence-Breeding Employment of Christianity
Abstract View: 235,
pdf Download: 87
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Decolonizing Buddhist Authority: Religious Nationalism and State-Sanctioned Violence in Myanmar
Abstract View: 183,
pdf Download: 51
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Beyond State-Centered Sharia: Muslim Women, Decolonial Feminism, and Islamic Legal Authority in Aceh and Mindanao
Abstract View: 99,
pdf Download: 28
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Embodied Queer Muslim Resistance: Negotiating Islam, Gender, and Sexuality from Pesantren
Abstract View: 121,
pdf Download: 28
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Sacred Legitimacy and Political Failure: Religion in Balthasar Klau’s Movement in Southern Belu, 1950–1965
Abstract View: 131,
pdf Download: 51
Book Review
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A Review of Aisha M. Beliso-De Jesús’s Excited Delirium: Race, Police Violence, and the Invention of a Disease
Abstract View: 61,
pdf Download: 34



