The Journal of Digital Islamic Thought (JDIT) is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by Zamzami Scholar Publishing in Sidoarjo, East Java, Indonesia. The journal focuses on the study of Islamic intellectual traditions within digitally mediated contexts, covering the core disciplines of Ushuluddin, including Qur’anic studies (tafsir), Hadith studies, Islamic theology (kalām), Islamic philosophy, Sufism, and Islamic political thought. It provides an international forum for the publication of original, rigorous research examining how Islamic knowledge is produced, circulated, interpreted, and contested in contemporary digital environments.

JDIT is distinguished by its development of Digital Ushuluddin Studies as a specific and emerging field of inquiry. The journal conceptualizes digitality not merely as a technological medium, but as an epistemic and discursive domain that reshapes authority, transforms interpretive practices, and reconfigures the structure of Islamic knowledge. This focus enables a systematic engagement with the transformation of classical Islamic scholarship in relation to digital platforms, networked publics, and evolving forms of religious discourse in contemporary society.

The journal publishes original research articles that are theoretically grounded, methodologically rigorous, and analytically driven. It welcomes interdisciplinary approaches, including textual and hermeneutical analysis, philosophical inquiry, critical discourse analysis, and digital ethnography, as long as they contribute to advancing conceptual clarity and scholarly debate. The scope of the journal includes, but is not limited to, digital tafsir and Qur’anic studies, digital hadith studies, digital Islamic theology, digital Islamic philosophy, digital Sufism, contemporary Islamic thought and reform in digital contexts, and digital Islamic political thought.

JDIT prioritizes contributions that move beyond descriptive accounts by offering critical analysis and theoretical innovation, particularly those grounded in contemporary digital settings and informed by perspectives from Muslim societies in the Global South. Purely normative or doctrinal discussions are not considered unless they are situated within broader socio-digital and epistemic frameworks.

By bridging classical Islamic intellectual traditions with contemporary debates on digital transformation, JDIT seeks to establish a distinctive and internationally relevant platform for examining the evolving conditions of Islamic thought in the digital age.