Aim and Scope
Emerging Technologies and Engineering Journal (ETEJ) is an international, peer-reviewed, open-access journal dedicated to publishing high-quality research on emerging technologies and their applications in engineering, computing, applied sciences, and technology-driven innovation.
The journal welcomes original research articles, review articles, systematic reviews, case-based technical studies, and short communications that demonstrate clear methodological quality, scientific contribution, and relevance to contemporary engineering and technological development.
ETEJ particularly encourages submissions in the following areas:
- Artificial intelligence and machine learning applications in engineering
- Computer science, software systems, and data-driven technologies
- Smart systems, automation, robotics, and digital transformation
- Sustainable engineering technologies and green innovation
- Civil, mechanical, electrical, industrial, and environmental engineering applications
- Emerging technologies in engineering education and professional practice
- Internet of Things, cyber-physical systems, digital twins, and intelligent infrastructure
- Applied computational methods, modelling, simulation, and optimization
- Technology management, innovation systems, and interdisciplinary engineering solutions
The journal prioritizes manuscripts that offer a clear research gap, rigorous methodology, international relevance, strong analytical depth, and a meaningful contribution to the field.
ETEJ does not normally consider manuscripts that are purely descriptive, locally limited without broader relevance, methodologically weak, outside the journal scope, or lacking a clear scientific contribution.
Out of Scope
ETEJ does not consider manuscripts that are purely descriptive, locally limited without broader relevance, methodologically weak, outside the journal scope, or lacking a clear scientific contribution. In addition, ETEJ does not consider submissions that fall into one or more of the following categories:
- Manuscripts with no clear connection to emerging technologies, engineering, computing, or applied technological innovation.
- Pure opinion articles, essays, or descriptive reports without research methodology.
- Local case studies that do not provide transferable findings or international relevance.
- Manuscripts with insufficient novelty, weak research design, or unclear contribution.
- Papers with outdated or superficial literature reviews.
- Studies that rely only on general description without analysis, validation, modelling, experimentation, or critical discussion.
- Manuscripts with poor academic language that prevent clear scientific communication.
- Papers with ethical concerns, plagiarism, citation manipulation, data fabrication, or inappropriate authorship practices.