Archive Policy
State Law Review: Jurnal Hukum Negara dan Pemerintahan is committed to ensuring the long-term preservation, accessibility, and availability of all published scholarly content. The journal recognizes the importance of maintaining the integrity of the scholarly record and guaranteeing continued access to research outputs for academics, researchers, legal practitioners, policymakers, and future generations of scholars.
To safeguard its published content against technological obsolescence, data loss, or service interruption, State Law Review implements a comprehensive digital preservation strategy consisting of multiple preservation mechanisms.
1. Publisher's Internal Digital Archive
All articles published in State Law Review are securely stored and maintained on the journal's primary servers managed by PT Adikara Cipta Aksa. The journal implements routine backup procedures, data integrity monitoring, and server security measures to protect published content from accidental loss, corruption, or unauthorized access.
The internal archive serves as the primary preservation repository and ensures the continuous availability of all published materials through the journal's official website.
2. PKP Preservation Network (PKP PN)
State Law Review utilizes the PKP Preservation Network (PKP PN) as part of its digital preservation strategy. Through its Open Journal Systems (OJS) platform, the journal participates in the PKP PN, which provides long-term preservation services based on a distributed LOCKSS (Lots of Copies Keep Stuff Safe) infrastructure.
This preservation mechanism creates secure archival copies of published content and ensures that journal articles remain accessible even in the event of technical failures, website discontinuation, or other unforeseen disruptions affecting the journal's primary platform.
3. National and Scholarly Repositories
To enhance discoverability, accessibility, and preservation, State Law Review seeks to archive and disseminate its published content through recognized national and international scholarly repositories and indexing services.
Published articles may be deposited, indexed, or archived in repositories and databases such as:
- Garuda (Garba Rujukan Digital);
- Google Scholar;
- Dimensions;
- Crossref;
- Other academic repositories and indexing services relevant to legal scholarship.
These repositories provide additional layers of preservation and ensure broader public access to the journal's scholarly content.
4. Author Self-Archiving Policy
State Law Review supports the principles of open access and permits authors to archive the final published version (Version of Record) of their articles in:
- Institutional repositories;
- University repositories;
- Personal academic websites;
- Non-commercial scholarly repositories;
- Research networking platforms that comply with copyright policies.
Authors who self-archive their work are encouraged to include complete bibliographic information, the official article URL, and the DOI assigned by the journal to ensure proper attribution and citation of the original publication.
5. Perpetual Access Commitment
In the unlikely event that State Law Review ceases publication or undergoes organizational changes, PT Adikara Cipta Aksa remains committed to preserving and maintaining permanent access to all previously published content.
Access to archived articles will continue to be supported through available preservation systems, including the PKP Preservation Network, institutional archives, and other preservation repositories utilized by the journal. This commitment ensures that the scholarly record published in State Law Review remains permanently accessible to the academic community and the public.
6. Policy Review
This Digital Preservation Policy may be periodically reviewed and updated to reflect developments in digital preservation technologies, publishing infrastructure, and best practices in scholarly communication. Any revisions will be published on the journal's website and applied prospectively.










