Abstract Submission Guidelines

Abstracts must be submitted in English. Each submission should include:

  • Title of the paper 
  • Author(s) name(s) 
  • Affiliation(s) 
  • Email address of the corresponding author 
  • Abstract 
  • Five keywords 
  • Preferred presentation type 

The abstract should:

  • contain 250–300 words 
  • clearly state: 
  • Background 
  • Objectives 
  • Methodology 
  • Findings (or expected findings) 
  • Conclusions 
  • be written in clear academic English 
  • Do not include references, tables or figures. 

Abstracts will undergo double-blind peer review by the Scientific Committee. Acceptance decisions of the reviewers are final. 

Full Paper Submission Guidelines

Authors whose abstracts are accepted are invited to submit full papers.

Paper Length: 6000-8000 words (including references and excluding appendices )

Formatting Requirements:

  • MS Word (.docx) 
  • A4 paper size 
  • Times New Roman 
  • Font size: 12 pt 
  • Line spacing: 1.5 
  • Margins: 2.54 cm (1 inch) on all sides 
  • Page numbers at the bottom centre 

Paper Structure:

  • Title 
  • Author information 
  • Abstract (250–300 words) 
  • Keywords (3–5) 
  • Introduction 
  • Literature Review 
  • Research Methodology 
  • Results/Findings 
  • Discussion and Conclusion
  • References 

Referencing Style: The chosen style must be applied consistently throughout the paper.

Originality – submitted papers must:

  • be original work 
  • not have been previously published 
  • not be under consideration elsewhere 
  • Comply with ethical research standards. 

The Organising Committee may use plagiarism detection software. Similarity should normally not exceed 20% (excluding references and quotations).

Publication Opportunity

Selected papers, after peer review and revision, may be considered for publication in:

  • Conference Proceedings
  • Edited online Full Paper Publication

(subject to editorial review and publication requirements).

Ethical Responsibilities

Authors are responsible for:

  • obtaining ethical approval where required; 
  • ensuring informed consent where human participants are involved; 
  • acknowledging all sources; 
  • avoiding plagiarism and data fabrication; 
  • declaring any conflicts of interest. 

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