The new journal serves as a specialized platform for investigating money as a final settlement authority and the mechanisms by which financial obligations are created, transferred, and extinguished. Rather than operating as a traditional peer-reviewed journal, the publication functions as literary infrastructure for monetary closure theory, encouraging critical inquiry into credit systems, legal enforcement, and institutional trust.
In section Releases
Federal Financial Education Institute Launches Journal of Monetary Philosophy
The Washington-based Federal Financial Education Institute has introduced the Journal of Monetary Philosophy, an open-access publication aimed at exploring the theoretical and legal underpinnings of money. The initiative seeks to provide a dedicated space for researchers to examine the architecture of financial order and settlement systems.

Hweykin Mynn, a spokesperson for the institute, emphasized that money should be viewed as a complex legal and philosophical structure rather than a simple market instrument. The editorial team intends to host a diverse range of work, spanning from Chartalist and credit-money critiques to technical analyses of payment systems and stablecoin settlement case studies. The journal will release articles on a continuous basis as manuscripts are accepted, expanding the institute's existing educational ecosystem, which already includes platforms for student research and regulatory literacy.
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