Login or Register to make a submission.

As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.

  • The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
  • The submission file is in OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, or RTF document file format.
  • Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.
  • The text is single-spaced; uses a 12-point font; Time New Roman, rather than underlining (except with URL addresses); and all illustrations, figures, and tables are placed within the text at the appropriate points, rather than at the end.
  • The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines.

Manuscript Requirements

  1. The manuscript to be submitted must be in English only and must be checked for accuracy by a language expert before being sent to the editorial team.
  2. The submitter must check the accuracy of the manuscript, such as spelling, punctuation, and appropriateness and fluency of the language used.
  3. The title of the article must be concise and clear, arranged in the middle of the page.
  4. The author must state his/her full name (in English), academic position (if any) under the article title, arranged in the middle of the page (in the case of multiple authors, arrange according to the proportion of writing).
  5. Articles summarized from thesis or doctoral dissertation must include the name of the advisor, along with academic position and affiliation, after the author's name.
  6. The author must clearly state the location or affiliation of each author of the article, including the email address (if any), including the affiliation of the advisor in the Footnote on the first page of the article.
  7. The submitter must write an abstract in English. (Length should not exceed 250 words) with 3-5 keywords under the abstract. Each page should not exceed 1 A4 paper.
  8. The original article must not exceed 15-20 pages in length printed on one side of A4 paper (including the abstract, figures, tables, and references).
  9. Formulas, equations, figures, tables, and charts should be included only as necessary. They must be numbered and captioned above or below the table or figure, in order, such as Table 1, 2, 3,... or Figure 1, 2, 3,...
  10. English articles should be printed in Times New Roman font, 12 points. Thai titles should be Cordia UPC, 18 points bold, headings should be 16 points bold. English titles should be Times New Roman, 18 points bold, headings should be 16 points bold.
  11. Components of each type of article

            11.1 Academic articles The headings and content should completely point out the issues to be presented and have an appropriate sequence of content so that readers can clearly understand. It also uses theories to analyze various issues according to academic principles. The summary of the issues may be the synthesis of knowledge, conceptual frameworks and theories from various sources, where the author can clearly present his/her own academic perspective and benefit the readers. It should include the following components:

            1) Introduction

            2) Content as appropriate

            3) Conclusion

            4) References

            11.2 Research articles should present the research and results systematically and should include the following components (different topics or components can be used as appropriate):

            1) Introduction that covers the importance and origin of the research problem

            2) Objective

            3) Literature Review

            4) Research Methodology that can clearly explain the research methodology, including population and sample, data collection methods and data analysis methods

            5) Research Finding

            6) Discussion and Conclusion

            7) New Knowledge

            8) Recommendation

            9) References

  1. References

           To ensure that the references at the end of the article are in an international standard format And in preparation for entering ACI, the editorial team has determined that all reference documents must be cited or mentioned both in the content of the article and at the end of the article or in the reference list in accordance with the criteria of the American Psychological Association, APA 7th edition, arranged in a strictly specified format and completely. That is, the reference list for documents in English should be listed under the heading "References" and then arranged alphabetically together with the English references again. As an example

References

Community Organization Development Institute (Public Organization). (2008). In Community Organization Council Act 2008. Community Organization Development Institute.

Mangkhang, C. et al. (2016). A study project of the royal project's knowledge transfer and capacity building for highland communities. Highland Research and Development Institute (Public Organization), Thailand.

Muangyai, A. (2016). Development approach to enhancing the potential of community and local in the twenty-first century. EAU Heritage Journal Social Science and Humanity, 6(3), 12-26. https://so01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/EAUHJSocSci/article/view/70878

Nawa, P. (2019). The roles of community leaders of sustainability local economy[Independent Study, Ramkhamhaeng University].

Piansang, C. (2011). Community economy development according to sufficiency economy guide, Case study: Suvannabum District Roi-et Province. Faculty of Economics, Chiang Mai University.

Prommatat, C. (2021). Community brand building grass root economy strength promotion. Trade Policy and Strategy Office.

Seeniang, P., Chimmanee, A., Thungngern, J., & Kummanee, K. (2019). Living based on philosophy of sufficiency economy of farmers in Ban Wai Nieo Community, Tha Maka District, Kanchanaburi Province. King Mongkut’s Agricultural Journal, 37(3), 527-537. https://li01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/agritechjournal/article/view/217241

Sinvimon, S., & Wiratnipawan, W. (2016). Development of agricultural administration of Phra Nakhon Si Ayuthaya province according to the sufficiency economy philosophy. EAU Heritage Journal Social Science and Humanities, 6(2), 228-241. https://so01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/EAUHJSocSci/article/view/67164

Tamphiya, P. (2012). 1997 Economy crisis with sufficiency economy philosophy. The Crown Property Bureau, Thailand.