Australian Review of Applied Linguistics
Main information
Journal metrics
Impact Factor: 0.9 (5-year: 1.1)Journal Citation Indicator: 0.69
CiteScore: 3.7
SNIP: 1.169 SJR: 0.486
This journal is peer reviewed and indexed in: Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER ) ; CNKI Scholar ; Dimensions ; Glottolog ; Scopus ; WoS Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI )
The Australian Review of Applied Linguistics (ARAL) is the preeminent journal of the Applied Linguistics Association of Australia (ALAA). ARAL is a peer reviewed journal that promotes scholarly discussion and contemporary understandings of language-related matters with a view to impacting on real-world problems and debates. The journal publishes empirical and theoretical research on language/s in educational, professional, institutional and community settings. ARAL welcomes national and international submissions presenting research related to any of the major sub-disciplines of Applied Linguistics as well as transdisciplinary studies. Areas of particular interest include but are not limited to:
• Analysis of discourse and interaction
• Bi/multilingualism and bi/multilingual education
• Community and heritage language education
• Corpus linguistics
• Indigenous languages (inc. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander languages) in Education
• Language assessment and testing
• Language and technology
• Language, culture and identity
• Language planning and policy
• Language teaching, incl specific languages and TESOL
• Pragmatics and intercultural communication
• Psycholinguistics
• Research design and methodology
• (Second) language acquisition and learning
• Sociolinguistics
• Translating and interpreting
There are three issues of ARAL per year including a special issue focusing on critical aspects and developments in the field.
ARAL publishes its articles Online First.
John Benjamins Publishing Company is the official publisher of the journal, as of Volume 39 (2016).
Additionally, thematic issues have appeared in Australian Review of Applied Linguistics. Series S.
Latest articles
23 March 2026
13 March 2026
27 February 2026
23 February 2026
12 February 2026
10 February 2026
23 January 2026
16 January 2026
15 January 2026
13 January 2026
12 January 2026
15 December 2025
13 November 2025
28 October 2025
30 September 2025
28 July 2025
17 July 2025
2 June 2025
20 March 2025
18 March 2025
25 February 2025
24 February 2025
30 January 2025
7 January 2025
6 January 2025
17 December 2024
16 December 2024
26 November 2024
22 November 2024
Issues
Online-first articlesVolume 49 (2026)
Volume 48 (2025)
Volume 47 (2024)
Volume 46 (2023)
Volume 45 (2022)
Volume 44 (2021)
Volume 43 (2020)
Volume 42 (2019)
Volume 41 (2018)
Volume 40 (2017)
Volume 39 (2016)
Volume 38 (2015)
Volume 37 (2014)
Volume 36 (2013)
Volume 35 (2012)
Volume 34 (2011)
Volume 33 (2010)
Volume 32 (2009)
Volume 31 (2008)
Volume 30 (2007)
Volume 29 (2006)
Volume 28 (2005)
Volume 27 (2004)
Volume 26 (2003)
Volume 25 (2002)
Volume 24 (2001)
Volume 23 (2000)
Volume 22 (1999)
Volume 21 (1998)
Volume 20 (1997)
Volume 19 (1996)
Volume 18 (1995)
Volume 17 (1994)
Volume 16 (1993)
Volume 15 (1992)
Volume 13 (1991)
Volume 13 (1990)
Volume 12 (1989)
Volume 11 (1988)
Volume 10 (1987)
Volume 9 (1986)
Volume 8 (1985)
Volume 7 (1984)
Volume 6 (1983)
Volume 5 (1982)
Volume 4 (1981)
Volume 3 (1980)
Volume 2 (1979)
Volume 1 (1977/78)
Editorial info
Subscription Info
General information about our electronic journals.
Subscription rates
All prices for print + online include postage/handling.
| Online-only | Print + online | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Volume 49 (2026): 4 issues; ca. 600 pp. | EUR | EUR |
Individuals may apply for a special online-only subscription rate of EUR
Private subscriptions are for personal use only, and must be pre-paid and ordered directly from the publisher.
Available back-volumes
| Online-only | Print + online | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Complete backset (Vols. 1‒48; 1977‒2025) | 115 issues; 14,756 pp. | EUR 4,339.00 | EUR 5,973.00 |
| Volume 48 (2025) | 3 issues; 450 pp. | EUR | EUR |
| Volume 47 (2024) | 3 issues; 375 pp. | EUR | EUR |
| Volume 46 (2023) | 3 issues; 375 pp. | EUR | EUR |
| Volume 45 (2022) | 3 issues; 375 pp. | EUR | EUR |
| Volumes 43‒44 (2020‒2021) | 3 issues; avg. 300 pp. | EUR | EUR |
| Volume 42 (2019) | 3 issues; 300 pp. | EUR | EUR |
| Volume 41 (2018) | 3 issues; 300 pp. | EUR | EUR |
| Volume 40 (2017) | 3 issues; 300 pp. | EUR | EUR |
| Volume 39 (2016) | 3 issues; 300 pp. | EUR | EUR |
| Volumes 29‒38 (2006‒2015) | 3 issues; avg. 329 pp. | Open Access | EUR |
| Volumes 1‒28 (1977‒2005) | 2 issues; avg. 288 pp. | EUR | EUR |
Author info
The journal invites contributions relevant to the aim and scope of the journal.
Articles under consideration are double-blind peer-reviewed and decisions on all published content are made by the editors.
ARAL now follows "Your Paper Your Way": we differentiate between the requirements for new and revised submissions.
If this is the first time submitting your paper, you do not need to follow the official ARAL stylesheet. You may choose to submit your manuscript as a single Word or PDF file to be used in the initial refereeing process, with only minimal expectations for formatting; your paper must still follow the general style of an academic paper, including appropriate consistency in terms, citation, paragraphing and headings.
When preparing a submission, please consult these:
as well as the publishers' information on Ethics and Rights below.
Only if/when your paper is invited to be revised following initial review will you be requested to put your paper in to a 'correct format' for acceptance, in line with the
Submissions should be done through the journal's online EM submission portal .
If you are not able to submit online, or for any other editorial correspondence, please contact the editors by e-mail: araleditorgmail.com
Ethics
John Benjamins journals are committed to maintaining the highest standards of publication ethics and to supporting ethical research practices.
Authors and reviewers are kindly requested to read this Ethics Statement.
Please also note the guidance on (the declaration of) the use of Artificial Intelligence.
In addition, authors should consider the journal's instructions on declaring the use of AI.
Rights and Permissions
Authors must ensure that they have permission to use any third-party material in their contribution; the permission should include perpetual (not time-limited) world-wide distribution in print and electronic format.
For information on authors' rights, please consult the rights information page.
Open Access
Articles accepted for this journal can be made Open Access through payment of an Article Publication Charge (APC) of EUR 1800 (excl. tax). To arrange this, please contact openaccessbenjamins.nl as soon as your paper has been accepted for publication. More information can be found on the publisher's Open Access Policy page.
Corresponding authors from institutions with which John Benjamins has a Read & Publish arrangement can publish Open Access without paying a fee. Please consult this list of institutions for up-to-date information on which articles qualify.
For information about permission to post a version of your article online or in an institutional repository ('green' open access or self-archiving), please consult the rights information page.
If the article is not (to be made) Open Access, there is no fee for the author to publish in this journal.
Archiving
John Benjamins Publishing Company has an agreement in place with Portico for the archiving of all its online journals and e-books.
ARAL Stylesheet
General Information
Please take care that you supply all the files, text as well as graphic files, used in the creation of the manuscript. Check that all files are valid/readable.
Word (PC/Mac) is preferred. If you use LaTex, a matching PDF must be provided as well.
Lay-out
Do not add full justification or hyphenation, or the exact margin settings as used by Benjamins in printing; it is sufficient to characterize elements such as examples, quotations, tables, headings etc. in the formatting in a clear and consistent way, so that they can be identified and formatted in the style of the journal. Please do not include running heads with your article; However, in case of a long title (> 55 characters), please suggest a shorter running head.
Formatting that should be supplied by you is the formatting of references (see below) and font enhancements (such as italics, bold, caps, small caps, etc.) in the text. Whatever formatting or notational conventions are employed, please be consistent.
Tables and figures
Tables and figures should be numbered consecutively. They should be referred to in the main text in this manner, e.g., “in Table 2”, but never like this “in the following table: ”. Please indicate the preferred position of the table or figure in the text if these are provided in separate files.
Tables and figures should be provided with appropriate captions.
All figures should be provided with alt(ernative) text to ensure accessibility, following this guidance.
All tables, trees and figures must fit within the following page size (either in portrait or landscape orientation, and if necessary after –limited– reduction) and should still be legible at this size: 11.5 cm (4.52”) x 19 cm (7.48”).
Emphasis and foreign words
Use italics for foreign language, highlighting and emphasis. Bold should be used only for highlighting within italics and for headings. Please refrain from the use of FULL CAPS (except for focal stress and abbreviations) and underlining (except for highlighting within examples, as an alternative for boldface), unless this is a strict convention in your field of research. For terms or expressions (for example, ‘context of situation’) please use single quotes. For glosses of citation forms, use double quotes.
Quotations
In the main text quotations should be given in double quotation marks. Quotations longer than three lines should be indented left and right, without quotations marks and with the appropriate reference to the source. They should be set off from the main text by a line of space above and below.
Listings
Listing should not be indented. If numbered, please number as follows:
1. ..................... or a. .......................
2. ..................... or b. .......................
Listings that run on
with the main text can be numbered in parentheses: (1).............., (2)............., etc.
Examples and glosses
Examples should be numbered with Arabic numerals (1,2,3, etc.) in parentheses.
Examples in languages other than English should be in italics with an approximate translation into English. Between the original and the translation, an interlinear gloss should be added. This interlinear gloss gets no punctuation and no highlighting. For the abbreviations in the interlinear gloss, CAPS or small caps can be used, which will be converted to small caps by our typesetters in final formatting. A comprehensive glossary of abbreviations used in the interlinear glosses in your paper should be included as an Appendix.
Transliteration. Please transliterate into English any examples from languages that use a non-Latin script, using the appropriate transliteration system.
Please note that lines 1 and 2 are lined up through the use of tabs set at 0.2cm: it is essential that the number of elements in lines 1 and 2 match. If two words in the example correspond to one word in the gloss use a full stop to glue the two together (2a). Morphemes are separated by hyphens (1, 2b).
Every next level in the example gets one indent/tab.
(1) Kare wa besutoseraa o takusan kaite-iru.
he TOP best-seller ACC
many write-PERF
“He has written many best-sellers.”
(2) a. Jan houdt.van Marie.
Jan
loves Marie
“Jan
loves Marie.”
b.
Ed en Floor gaan samen-wonen.
Ed
and Floor go together-live.INF
“Ed
and Floor are going to live together.”
Please refer to the Leipzig Glossing Rules for more detailed instructions on how to provide language examples in languages other than English.
Notes
Notes should be kept to a minimum and should be submitted as numbered endnotes.
Note indicators in the text should appear at the end of sentences and follow punctuation marks.
References
It is essential that the references are formatted to the specifications given in these guidelines, as these cannot be formatted automatically. Please use the reference style as described in The APA Publication Manual (7th ed.).
Additional Style Guidance
- indicate a new paragraph with a single tab (except for the first paragraph of the section and after the indented quote)
- set off any introductory phrase of five words or more with a comma, e.g. “Toward the end of World War II,...”
- dates should be of the form “15 December 1998”
- decades should be of the form “the 1980s”
- spell out centuries, e.g., “eighteenth century”
- use “and” in place of “&”, “see” in place of “cf.”, and “for example” in place of “e.g.” in text outside brackets
- use minimal capitalization, e.g., “translation studies”, “the Roman Catholic church”;
- use minimal hyphenization, e.g., “postcolonial”
- possessives of names ending in “s” should take the form of “Yeats's”
- please avoid inappropriately gendered language, finding locutions as well that avoid awkward forms like “his/her” whenever possible
