Themes
Your journal, your look.
Because Citeable runs on WordPress, a journal’s whole appearance is just a theme. Change the look without touching the content, the workflow or the indexing — and lean on the entire WordPress design world, and the designers who already know it, to do it.
One journal, any theme
Here is the same journal — the Elgin Law Journal — presented three ways. The issues, articles, authors and metadata underneath are identical; only the theme changes. Where OJS gives you one look and a specialist job to alter it, here it is a setting and a stylesheet.
Covers, generated for you
Every issue gets a cover automatically, drawn from its own details — the journal’s abbreviation, volume, issue and year — in the journal’s own colours. No designer and no upload; a small thing, but a nice one. Replace it with your own artwork whenever you like.
2026Elgin Law Journal
2025Elgin Law Journal
2025Elgin Law Journal
2024Elgin Law Journal
The same generator follows whatever accent and abbreviation the journal sets — so the cover always matches the theme.
What a page actually looks like
And here is a single article as a reader meets it — in the journal’s own theme, with the metadata laid out for citation and indexing, an open abstract, an access badge, and the canonical PDF a click away. The theme renders it; Citeable supplies the parts.
This article examines the boundaries of curial deference in Scots administrative law, tracing how the courts have calibrated the intensity of review against questions of institutional competence and democratic legitimacy, and argues for a more structured, proportionality-led approach.