Peer Review Process

Criteria for Acceptance and Publication

The evaluation and publication of manuscripts in the Journal of Financial and Economic Law Research are conducted based on the following criteria: Manuscripts must contain original scientific findings derived from research projects, dissertations, or other scholarly outputs, including fundamental, applied, developmental, theoretical, or comparative studies, and must introduce an innovative theory or methodological contribution aimed at addressing national issues with the dual qualities of originality and creativity. Submissions should provide scientifically grounded and practically oriented recommendations that contribute to the identification and resolution of at least one contemporary financial–economic challenge through rigorous legal analysis. Articles are expected to include interdisciplinary content integrating perspectives from law, finance, and economics. Each submission must align with at least one of the thematic foci of the journal. Manuscripts must demonstrate scientific analysis of the research subject and offer a critical assessment of existing problems or risks arising from financial and economic challenges in the country. Submissions should present novel research findings and follow a clearly defined scientific methodology.


Core Scientific Themes of the Journal

Key thematic fields covered by the journal include, but are not limited to: Securities and Capital Market Law, including legal aspects of securities exchanges, self-regulatory organizations, capital market participants, corporate and financial institutions law, market supervision and intervention, financial instruments, securities transactions, international capital markets, and public law dimensions of capital markets; Monetary Market and Banking Law, encompassing legal–economic issues related to money markets, foreign exchange, credit, lending, money creation, cryptocurrencies and digital money, modern banking, and international payment systems; Insurance Market Law, addressing legal–economic issues in insurance and underwriting; Privatization Law, including models and methods of privatization, legal–economic foundations of privatization, state intervention in markets, and good governance in financial–economic sectors; Competition Law, covering competition legislation, monopolies, anticompetitive practices, and remedial mechanisms; Computational, Accounting, and Auditing Law, focusing on legal issues in accounting and auditing; Budgetary, Tax, and Public Finance Law; Development Economics, Finance, and Investment Law; Customs Law and Regulations on Free Trade Zones and Special Economic Zones; Business, Commercial Entities, and Industry Regulation Law; Economic and Financial Analysis of Law and Legal Analysis of Financial or Economic Phenomena; International Financial and Economic Law; Social Economic Law and Law of Poverty Alleviation; Financial Market Policy-Making, Legislation, and Regulation; Knowledge-Based Financial and Economic Law; Jurisprudential Foundations of Financial–Economic Law; Book Reviews, Legal and Regulatory Critiques, Article Reviews, and Scholarly Assessments in Financial and Economic Law; and other areas pertaining to financial and economic law.