
Reciprocal: Interlegality Review
Journal Initials: RIR
e-ISSN: xxxx-xxxx
DOI Prefix: 10.66277 by ![]()
Publisher: Elkuator Research and Publication
Frequency: Biannual (May and November)
Access Model: Open Access Journal
Editor-in-Chief: Ali Akhbar Abaib Mas Rabbani Lubis
Citation Analysis: Google Scholar | Dimensions
Reciprocal: Interlegality Review is a peer-reviewed academic journal dedicated to publishing original and high-quality research on the interdisciplinary study of legal issues, exploring the dynamics of interactions between the state and societies, particularly within Indonesian contexts. The journal promotes a critical perspectives on interlegality phenomena in Indonesia, highlighting critically examining how state law interacts, competes, and co-evolves with non-state normative orders, including customary (adat), political, religious, and transnational legal frameworks. The journal also welcomes original scholarly contributions from other jurisdictions engaging with issues of legal pluralism.
The journal welcomes original and critical research from scholars and practitioners employing interdisciplinary, comparative, empirical, case study and socio-legal approaches, with particular attention to: 1) Interlegality and Legal Pluralism Studies; 2) Law and Society (Socio-Legal and Critical Legal Approaches); 3) Customary (Adat) and Indeginous Legal Orders; 4) Agrarian, Enviromental, and Natural Resource Law; 5) Law, Politics, and Regulatory Governance; 6) Constitutionalism, Governance, and Administrative Power; 7) Human Rights, Access to Justice, and Legal Inequality; 8) Law and Religion (including Islamic Legal Traditions in plural context); 9) Economic Law and Development in Hybrid Legal Systems; 10) Health, Bioethics, and Medical Law; and 11) Law and Digital Technology, as well as other emerging legal issues shaping legal practices in societies. By integrating theory with practice, Reciprocal: Interlegality Review provides a forum for academic advancement and engagement with the evolving legal landscape, especially in relation to contemporary issues of legal pluralism within broader global discourse.
Current Issue
This issue has been available online since April 10, 2026. It features five original research articles authored or co-authored by 17 authors from 5 countries: Indonesia, Thailand, Netherlands, Nigeria, and Italy

Articles
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Cognitive Nature and Islamic Philanthropy Practices Among Muhammadiyah Members in Central Borneo
Abstract View: 617,
PDF Download: 367
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Democratic Hypocrisy and Electoral Regulation: A Critical Legal Analysis of Former Corruption Convicts in Electoral Politics
Abstract View: 282,
PDF Download: 142
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Petro-Politics and Democratic Deficit: Oil, Elite Capture, and the Crisis of Governance in Nigeria, 1960–2024
Abstract View: 214,
PDF Download: 107
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When Legislative Oversight Becomes Interlegal Contestation: Hak Angket, Public Maṣlaḥah, and Local Politics in Salatiga, Indonesia
Abstract View: 202,
PDF Download: 83
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Renegotiating Disability Rights in Indonesian Islam: Muhammadiyah, Nahdlatul Ulama, and a Non-Reductionist Approach
Abstract View: 232,
PDF Download: 60
