ATRAS is a double-blind, peer-reviewed, and open-access journal dedicated to publishing high-quality research. We welcome original research articles, comprehensive review papers, and critical studies that contribute to academic and professional discourse. Our mission is to provide a platform for scholars, researchers, and practitioners to share innovative findings, engage in interdisciplinary discussions, and advance knowledge in their respective domains.
We uphold rigorous academic standards through a thorough peer-review process. Following the initial acceptance of a submission, the review process typically takes between 15 days and two months, ensuring a balance between efficiency and quality. ATRAS is committed to maintaining transparency, integrity, and accessibility in scholarly publishing, making valuable research available to a global audience.
ATRAS covers a broad range of topics, including but not limited to the following areas:
Language Studies: Language and culture, grammar, syntax, phonetics, morphology, semantics, discourse analysis, and the history of language.
Linguistics: Micro-linguistics, macro-linguistics, applied linguistics, translation studies, contrastive analysis, language education, cognitive linguistics, anthropology, psychology, phonetics, stylistics, philosophy of language, psycholinguistics, sociolinguistics, ethnolinguistics, phonology, semiotics, epigraphy, and palaeography.
Applied Linguistics: Language teaching, lexicography, applied phonetics, applied sociolinguistics, the development of international and specialized languages, medical linguistics, graphology, and ethnolinguistics.
Literature: Literary studies, poetry, prose, essays, drama, the novel, and philology.
Cultural Studies: Cross-cultural studies, art, language politics, religion, customs, the humanities, archaeology, philosophy, historical studies, and tourism.
Translation Studies: Theories and practices of translation, contrastive analysis, translation technologies, terminology management, literary and audiovisual translation, interpretation, and the role of translation in cross-cultural communication.
Sociology: Social structures, institutions, change, stratification, deviance, globalization, gender, education, health, politics, economy, environment, culture, digital society, and ethnography.
Psychology: Cognition, behavior, clinical, social, development, neuropsychology, forensic, health, education, work, personality, psychometrics, therapy, and positive psychology.
