PREPARATION OF THE TEXTS
Collectanea Theologica is widely regarded as one of the leading scholarly general-theological journals in Poland. Therefore, the submitted text should be refined in their content and form. In line with the original intention of the editorial board, the articles, especially those published in English, should take part in international theological disputes. Therefore, their level should meet the requirements of participating in scholarly discussions in the international realm. It is not sufficient merely to describe source texts in order to make them better known to Polish readers.
The submitted texts should, as a rule, contain the formulation of a research problem (preferably, an important and/or actual one), the present state of question in international research, and against this background an original way to solve the problem, conclusions, an English and a Polish abstract, and an adequate bibliography.
ARTICLE STRUCTURE AND FORMATTING
Authors are asked to prepare their manuscripts in accordance with the structure and formatting rules below. This ensures a smooth editorial process and consistency across all articles published in Collectanea Theologica (CT).
The journal accepts original manuscripts in English or in Polish only. Manuscripts must not have been published previously in any language and must not be under review elsewhere.
Authors are required to use the official CT Word template when preparing their manuscripts:
Download the CT manuscript template (Word): TEMPLATE
Please read this page together with the template before you start writing.
TEXT FORMATTING (basic settings)
File format: Microsoft Word (.docx).
Font: Times New Roman, 12 pt.
Line spacing: 1.5.
Margins: 2.5 cm on all sides.
Use bold only for emphasis in the main text and headings (according to the template).
Use italics only for titles of cited works and foreign expressions.
Do not use:
manual tabs to align text,
non-breaking spaces to shape lines,
manual line breaks to force line endings,
manual editing of letter spacing or deleting characters at the end of lines.
Use Word’s built-in tools for paragraphs, lists, headings and tables.
For all section and subsection titles, use Word’s built-in heading styles:
Heading 1 – main sections (e.g. “1. Introduction”, “2. Background”, “3. Discussion”, etc.).
Heading 2 – subsections (e.g. “2.1. …”),
Heading 3 – sub-subsections, if necessary. Do not create headings by manually changing the font size or only applying bold.
MANUSCRIPT STRUCTURE
Follow the structure given in the official template. A typical research article should contain the following sections:
Title
Author(s), affiliation(s), ORCID, e-mail
Abstract (700–800 characters, min. 400, max. 1200; one paragraph)
Keywords (max. 6), input into the system each one separately
1. Introduction (formulation of the research problem and analysis of the state of question)
2. Main body (e.g. theoretical background, methods, analysis of source texts)
3. Results and/or discussion
4. Conclusions
Statements (Author Contributions, Funding, etc.)
Bibliography
Appendix (if needed)
If you need to present large data tables, detailed methodological annexes or additional figures, please place them in an Appendix cited in the main text.
Bulletins and Reports may follow a less formal internal structure than research articles. However, they should still include:
an abstract,
a set of keywords.
References are welcome but not obligatory.
Book Reviews should contain the publication data of the book, its contents, and its scholarly evaluation.
ABSTRACT AND KEYWORDS
Abstract
Length: 700–800 characters (min. 400, max. 1200); one paragraph.
The abstract is not a simple summary. It should briefly point to the research problem, the way of solving it, and proposed solutions thereof (not disclosing everything). It should intrigue professors of theology and persuade them to read the whole article.
The abstract must accurately reflect the content of the article and must not exaggerate the findings.
Avoid references and uncommon abbreviations in the abstract.
Keywords
Provide max. 6 keywords. They should be input into the system each one separately, not as one text block.
Use terms that are specific to your article but common in the discipline, to facilitate indexing and searching.
FIGURES, TABLES AND ACCESSIBILITY REQUIREMENTS
In accordance with the European Accessibility Act (EAA) and relevant accessibility regulations, CT requires that all graphic elements be accessible to readers with disabilities. This applies to figures (photos, drawings, diagrams, maps, charts, logos, etc.) and tables.
4.1. Figures and photos (content, files and alt text)
Number figures and photos consecutively: Figure 1, Figure 2, Figure 3, …
Each figure in the manuscript must have:
a title (caption) placed under the figure,
information about the source (if applicable).
Uploading graphic files
In addition to figures embedded in the manuscript file:
Upload each figure as a separate high-resolution graphic file (e.g. JPG, PNG or another standard graphic format) to the journal’s online submission system together with the manuscript.
Name the files clearly according to their order in the text, for example: Figure-1, Figure-2, Figure-3, etc. (you may add a short keyword if needed, e.g. Figure-1-map).
Editable charts
If your figures are charts or graphs prepared in Excel, please provide them in an editable Excel file.
Collect all charts in a single Excel file and upload it to the submission system together with:
the manuscript file,
the separate graphic files.
Alt text for figures (alternative descriptions)
To comply with accessibility requirements, each figure must have a short alternative text (alt text) that can be read by screen readers. In CT, alt text is not inserted directly into the figure properties in the manuscript. Instead:
Prepare a separate Word file titled, for example: “Alt text for figures – [short title of the article]”.
List all figures in the order in which they appear in the manuscript.
For each figure, first provide the full caption, then add the alt text on a new line. Example structure:
Figure 1. Full title of the figure
Alt text: …
Figure 2. Full title of the figure
Alt text: …
The alt text should:
be short and informative (usually 1–3 sentences),
explain what the figure shows and why it is important for the article,
describe the essential information that a sighted reader obtains from the figure (main objects, relationships, variables, axes, units, trends or key comparisons),
for charts and graphs: mention the variables on each axis, the units, the time period (if applicable) and the main trend or comparison (e.g. which group has the highest value),
be factually accurate and consistent with the main text.
If a figure is purely decorative and contains no relevant information, please mark it explicitly as: “Alt text: decorative image – no informational content.”
Alt texts are required so that readers who are blind, partially sighted or deaf-blind can access the same substantive information as sighted readers.
4.2. Tables and short descriptions
Number tables consecutively: Table 1, Table 2, Table 3, …
Each table must have:
a title (caption) above the table,
a short description placed between the table title and the table.
The short description (1–3 sentences) should:
briefly state what type of data are presented,
name the main columns and, where applicable, the units of measurement,
indicate the most important pattern, comparison or trend (e.g. which group has the highest mean value, how variables differ between scenarios).
These short descriptions are necessary to meet accessibility requirements and to help readers quickly understand the essential content of the table, including those using assistive technologies.
TYPES OF SUBMISSIONS
Studia Ecologiae et Bioethicae accepts the following types of manuscripts:
Articles – original studies presenting new research results, theoretical analyses or analyses of source texts within the scope of the journal.
Bulletins and reports – thematic bulletins concerning research related to various theological subdisciplines as well as conference reports etc.
Reviews – scholarly reviews of recently published books.
All manuscript types must follow the ethical standards described in this document.
REFERENCES AND CITATION STYLE
The journal uses the Chicago author–year citation style (the most recent edition), adapted to the CT guidelines.
In the text, use in-text citations in the form: (Author year, page) – for example: (Jonas 1984, 25–27).
At the end of the manuscript, provide a bibliography which:
includes all works cited in the text and only those works,
is arranged in alphabetical order by the authors’ surnames and years of publication,
follows consistent punctuation, italics and order of elements (author, year, title, publication data).
In the Bibliography:
For the first author, provide surname followed by first name.
For subsequent authors, provide first name(s) followed by surname.
We give full names, and not only initials.
DOI and URL
Many journal articles have a DOI (Digital Object Identifier).
A DOI forms a stable URL beginning with https://doi.org/10.xxxx/xxxx.
When available, include the DOI in this URL form at the end of the reference. This DOI-based URL is preferred to long database-specific links (for example, from JSTOR or ScienceDirect).
For sources without a DOI, provide a short, stable URL to the journal, book or repository where the material can be accessed, or omit the URL if the source is a standard print-only publication.
Citation rules adopted by CT are referred to under the “Citation style” tab on the journal website.
ETHICAL AND LEGAL STATEMENTS
By the end of the manuscript, before the Bibliography, include a Statements section with the following subsections (as applicable):
Author Contributions – For research articles with several authors, a short paragraph specifying their individual contributions must be provided. The following statement template should be used (with initials of the authors inserted in place of X.X., Y.Y., Z.Z.): “Conceptualization, X.X. and Y.Y.; methodology, X.X.; software, X.X.; validation, X.X., Y.Y. and Z.Z.; formal analysis, X.X.; investigation, X.X.; resources, X.X.; data curation, X.X.; writing—original draft preparation, X.X.; writing—review and editing, X.X.; visualization, X.X.; supervision, X.X.; project administration, X.X.; funding acquisition, Y.Y. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.” This statement is required only for multi-authored articles.
Funding – state the funding sources or write “Not applicable.”
Institutional Review Board Statement –
if ethical approval was required: “The study was approved by the Institutional Review Board (or Ethics Committee) of NAME OF INSTITUTION (protocol code XXX and date of approval).”
if ethical approval was not required: write “Not applicable.”
Informed Consent Statement – where relevant for studies with human participants; otherwise: “Not applicable.”
Data Availability Statement – indicate where the data can be accessed (repository, on request from the authors, etc.), or “Not applicable.”
Acknowledgments – mention persons and institutions that supported the work and declare any use of generative AI tools (specifying which tool was used and for which task).
Conflicts of Interest – clearly state any conflicts of interest, or write “The authors declare no conflict of interest.”
If a given item does not apply to your article, do not delete the heading. Instead, write “Not applicable” under that heading.
ADDITIONAL DECLARATIONS REQUIRED AT SUBMISSION
When submitting a manuscript to Collectanea Theologica, the corresponding author is required to complete an online declaration form. In this form, the author indicates whether the submitted publication:
Addresses the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs),
Concerns research on Polish history, religiosity, culture, literature or language as elements essential for preserving identity and memory of the past,
Takes into account a gender equality perspective in the design, implementation or interpretation of the research (where applicable).
Please fill in the declaration form at the time of submission: https://forms.cloud.microsoft/e/tSy0cq5cmX?origin=lprLink.
Completing this form is mandatory and helps the journal and the university meet national and international reporting requirements.
PUBLISHING AGREEMENT
For each accepted manuscript, the authors are required to sign a Publishing Agreement with the Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski Publishing House.
Download the Publishing Agreement form from the journal’s website: https://czasopisma.uksw.edu.pl/pliki/ct/agreement.docx.
Fill out the document, print it and sign it by hand.
Scan the signed version.
Upload the scanned Publishing Agreement to the journal’s online submission system together with the manuscript and all accompanying files (graphic files, Excel file with editable charts, alt-text file for figures).
The publication process cannot be completed without a correctly signed and submitted Publishing Agreement.
FINAL CHECKLIST BEFORE
Before submitting your manuscript, please ensure that:
The manuscript is written in English or in Polish only.
The manuscript has been prepared using the official CT Word template: [Download].
The structure follows the CT template and uses Word’s Heading 1, 2, 3 styles for sections and subsections.
The abstract has 400–1200 characters and is written as a single paragraph.
There are max. 6 keywords, including SDG codes where relevant.
All figures and photos in the manuscript are numbered, have titles and, where applicable, sources.
All figures have been uploaded as separate high-resolution graphic files (Figure-1, Figure-2, etc.) to the submission system.
All charts have been collected in a separate Excel file and uploaded with the submission.
A separate Word file with alt text for all figures has been prepared and uploaded.
All tables are numbered, have titles and short descriptions placed between the title and the table.
All required Statements are present, each with appropriate content or “Not applicable”.
The Bibliography follows the Chicago author–year style and all in-text citations match entries in the Bibliography list.
DOIs are given in https://doi.org/… form whenever available.
Any use of GenAI tools has been declared in the Acknowledgments.
The online declaration form (SDGs / Polish heritage research/gender equality perspective) has been completed: https://forms.cloud.microsoft/e/tSy0cq5cmX?origin=lprLink.
A signed and scanned Publishing Agreement has been uploaded with the submission (Download).
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