About the Journal
African Bioethics and Law (Law/Health/Philosophy crossover) is a peer-reviewed, open-access journal under the Pan African Research Journals (PARJ) platform. It is positioned as a dedicated venue for scholarship in medicine and health sciences, with particular attention to Law/Health/Philosophy crossover.
Journal Mission
African Bioethics and Law welcomes manuscripts that make a clear scholarly contribution, engage meaningfully with prior literature, and present findings or arguments in a form suitable for long-term academic use. The editorial direction of the journal prioritises patient-centred research, translational evidence, public health impact, and context-specific health service improvement.
The journal is especially interested in work that speaks to African contexts without becoming parochial: submissions should be locally grounded where appropriate, but analytically strong enough to travel across institutions, disciplines, and regions.
Scope of Contributions
The journal publishes work connected to Bioethics. Suitable submissions may include clinical and population health studies, review articles, policy analyses, qualitative studies, and mixed-methods investigations. Across these formats, the editorial office expects coherent framing, an explicit contribution, and methods or reasoning that are inspectable by readers and reviewers.
Contributors should explain how their study or argument extends current knowledge, resolves a recognised problem, tests an approach, or provides a sharper synthesis of existing evidence.
Audience and Use
African Bioethics and Law (Law/Health/Philosophy crossover) serves health ministries, practitioners, academic medical centres, and partners supporting health systems strengthening. The journal is therefore edited for both subject-matter specialists and well-informed adjacent readers. Articles should remain technically sound while also explaining why the work matters, who may use it, and what limitations shape the interpretation of findings.
Publication Standards
The journal operates a structured editorial screening and peer-review process designed to connect African research communities with global readers and evidence users. Submissions are checked for scope fit, metadata completeness, similarity concerns, ethical compliance, and presentation quality before they move to external review or editorial decision.
Accepted content is prepared for stable online publication, archival access, citation visibility, and indexing support across the PARJ network.
Editorial Standards
Authors are expected to submit work written in clear UK English, supported by accurate references, transparent declarations, and a level of reporting proportionate to the claims being made. In this journal, high-quality reporting means ethical approval where required, participant safeguards, clinically meaningful outcomes, transparent limitations, and conflict disclosures.
Where applicable, manuscripts should also address ethics approval, participant protections, consent, funding, conflicts of interest, and data or materials availability.
Regional and Global Relevance
The editorial office encourages manuscripts that are useful in more than one setting: authors should show how their work contributes to disciplinary debate, policy discussion, teaching, professional practice, or future research. This is especially important in fields shaped by infrastructure constraints, regulatory complexity, or rapidly changing evidence environments.