Journal Information
| Original title | : | Journal of Digital Islamic Thought |
| Abbreviation | : | JDIT |
| Frequency | : | 2 issues per year (June and December) |
| Number of articles | : | 5 research articles and reviews per issue |
| DOI | : | https://doi.org/10.64685/JDIT |
| ISSN | : | 3124-0763 |
| Editor-in-Chief | : | Muhammad Lutfi |
| Publisher | : | Zamzami Scholar Publishing |
| Citation Analysis | : | Google Scholar; Garba Rujukan Digital |
| Subject Area | : | Arts and Humanities |
| Category | : | Religious Studies |
| Discipline | : | Digital Theology (Kalām); Digital Qur’anic and Tafsir Studies; Digital Hadith Studies; Digital Islamic Philosophy; Digital Contemporary Islamic Thought |
The Journal of Digital Islamic Thought (JDIT) is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by Zamzami Scholar Publishing (Sidoarjo, East Java, Indonesia). The journal is dedicated to advancing the study of Islamic intellectual traditions within digitally mediated contexts, with a focus on 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 platform for high-quality, original research that examines how Islamic knowledge is produced, circulated, and interpreted in contemporary digital environments.
JDIT is distinguished by its focus on Digital Ushuluddin Studies as an emerging field of inquiry. Rather than treating digital media as a neutral instrument, the journal conceptualizes digitality as an epistemic domain that reshapes religious authority, interpretive practices, and the structure of Islamic discourse. This approach enables a systematic analysis of how digitally mediated spaces influence the transformation of classical Islamic scholarship and its engagement with contemporary social, cultural, and political realities.
The journal prioritizes theoretically grounded and methodologically rigorous research that contributes to global academic debates in Islamic Studies and digital religion. By integrating classical Islamic intellectual traditions with contemporary analytical frameworks, JDIT seeks to offer a distinct scholarly contribution, particularly by amplifying perspectives from Muslim societies in the Global South and positioning them within international and comparative discussions on religion and digital transformation.
Current Issue
Vol. 1 No. 2 (2026): December