Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology

Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology

*  Publication period: Quarterly

* Type of articles that can be published: Research Article

* Journal rank: Scientific (B)

* The cost of publishing the article: 25,000,000 Rials

* How to issue an article acceptance certificate: by sending an email to the authors

* Type of article acceptance certificate: publication date and DOI code of the article are mentioned

* The name of the similarity finder software used to review articles: hamyab

* Evaluation method: equivalent, double-blind (the referees do not have the authors' information and the authors do not have information about the referees.)

* Duration of initial evaluation of the article: 10 days

* Duration of article evaluation by referees: 3 to 6 months

* How to contact the magazine office: through the contact us section

*  

About the Journal: The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology Research was first published in 2013 (1392) as a biannual academic journal. In the same year, it was granted a Scientific-Research (Academic) Grade by the Commission for Scientific Journals of Iran.

Since Autumn 2025 (Fall 1404), the journal has been published quarterly, under the authorization of the Ministry of Science, Research and Technology (MSRT).

According to the MSRT Bylaw dated April 29, 2019 (09/02/1398), all academic journals, including The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology Research, possess official scientific validity.

* How to access the text of the articles: This publication is an Open Access publication and the articles are free to download. 

* How to send the article to the publication? Through the Authors Guide section

This publication is published in cooperation with "The Iranian Association of International Criminal Law" and "Iranian Criminal Law Association" based on the signed memorandum.

The journal is indexed in the Islamic World Science Citation Database (ISC), and Noormags and Magiran.

It should be noted that the journal follows the rules of the International Ethics Committee (COPE).

 

Current Issue: Volume 13, Issue 27, Winter 2026 

Keywords Cloud

  • International Criminal Court
  • Criminal policy
  • Prevention
  • Criminal law
  • Human rights
  • Criminal Liability
  • International Crimes
  • Criminology
  • Fair trial
  • International Criminal Law
  • children
  • Criminalization
  • criminal responsibility
  • Punishment
  • Crimes against humanity
  • Prosecutor
  • Juvenile Delinquency
  • Criminal Justice
  • delinquency
  • Violence
  • Restorative justice
  • universal jurisdiction
  • Mediation
  • crime
  • public opinion
  • Iran
  • International Crime
  • Jurisprudence
  • Criminal Behavior
  • Evidence
  • victim
  • Power
  • Individual Criminal Responsibility
  • Crime Prevention
  • Extradition
  • Media
  • State crime
  • Compensation
  • Police
  • Jurisdiction
  • Criminal Procedure
  • Rape
  • criminal justice system
  • Cultural Criminology
  • Sexual Victimization
  • Iranian Law
  • Islamic Penal Code
  • terrorism
  • legislation
  • fear of crime
  • Law
  • International Community
  • Impunity
  • sexual violence
  • Legal Person
  • Challenges
  • ownership
  • Responsibility
  • Learning
  • Realism
  • Artificial intelligence
  • Children and Adolescents
  • Deterrence
  • Judicial Independence
  • McMenamin
  • humanitarian law
  • Apology
  • international responsibility
  • cooperation
  • Prison
  • Turkish Criminal Law
  • Islamic Jurisprudence
  • Genocide
  • Cultural norms
  • Criminal Law of Cyberspace
  • International and Regional Documents
  • Initial Investigations
  • Armed Conflict
  • Violence
  • Victimization
  • terrorist financing
  • Criminal Maturity
  • War Crimes
  • rationality
  • Alternatives to Imprisonment
  • Max Weber
  • European Arrest Warrant
  • Terrorism
  • Mental disorder
  • Rome Statute
  • legitimacy
  • Detention
  • Individualization
  • execution of criminal sentences
  • Women
  • International Criminal Courts
  • Money Laundering
  • the principle of legality
  • Judicial Police
  • Legislative Criminal Policy
  • national courts
  • crime against humanity
  • testimony
  • Imprisonment
  • decriminalization
  • Formalism
  • Defendant
  • International Documents
  • Social Emergency
  • Transfer of Prisoners
  • Sewage
  • treatment
  • challenge
  • Models
  • Witness
  • object
  • Restoration
  • structure
  • adolescents
  • Financing
  • Stigma
  • Islamic Republic of Iran
  • Ta\'zir
  • Civil Liability
  • social responsibility
  • Solutions
  • Ta\'zirat
  • Social Justice
  • retaliation
  • murder
  • Strategic intelligence
  • Temperature
  • Judge
  • criticism
  • Marginalization
  • Geography
  • Personality disorders
  • causality
  • Risk Management
  • philosophy
  • aggression
  • Empiricism
  • humanities
  • determinism
  • Management
  • European Union
  • Diabetes
  • Positivism
  • Abnormality
  • evaluation
  • Law Enforcement
  • international customary law
  • Medicine
  • freedom
  • Cinema
  • culture
  • Iran
  • judicial review
  • Modernization
  • Organized crimes
  • Cost
  • case
  • Disturbance
  • Rights of Accused
  • Gender
  • International Cooperation
  • Environmental Factors
  • Legality
  • School Children
  • ISIS
  • remedies
  • neoliberalism
  • Major Depression
  • interpretive approaches
  • Academic performance
  • ICC
  • the victim
  • Corruption
  • Protection
  • State
  • Side Effects
  • Response
  • Teenager
  • Benefit
  • investigations
  • preventive measures
  • scientific evidence
  • Spiritual Health
  • public places
  • English Law
  • Health
  • Academic motivation
  • Privacy
  • Situational prevention
  • Phenomenology
  • War Crime
  • self-concept
  • intervention
  • Population Control
  • Search