
Frontiers of Inquiry
Charting new intellectual territories across disciplines
Volume 1, Issue 2 — December 2025
Published December 2025
ISSN: 3069-8200
The Princeton Journal of Interdisciplinary Research (PJIR) presents its second issue, Frontiers of Inquiry, concluding the journal’s inaugural publishing year.
This issue builds on the momentum of Voices in Convergence by exploring the expanding boundaries of interdisciplinary thought. Through scientific innovation, social exploration, and theoretical reflection, Frontiers of Inquiry represents the next chapter in PJIR’s mission to amplify the voices of undergraduate and early-career researchers worldwide.
In recognition of outstanding scholarly contributions, Frontiers of Inquiry awards two Best Paper Awards in this issue. The first Best Paper Award is presented to "Burning with Purpose: Rethinking Power and Justice in Prescribed Burning" by Somtochukwu Arthur Attama of Pennsylvania State University, and the second Best Paper Award is presented to "The Paradox of Free Higher Education:
Examining the Impacts of No-Cost College Policy" by Joel Paulin Mendoza of Harvard Graduate School of Education. These papers exemplify intellectual rigor, originality, and the journal’s commitment to interdisciplinary research.
Editor’s Note
In a world where information moves quickly and knowledge is increasingly specialized, the work of research often begins with learning to look closely. We are trained to refine our focus, to define narrower and narrower questions, to master the language and methods of a specific field. This specialization has brought extraordinary progress. It allows scientists to map genetic pathways with precision, historians to reconstruct overlooked narratives, and philosophers to sharpen conceptual tools with clarity and depth. The ability to delve deeply is, without question, one of the great strengths of modern scholarship.
Yet there is also another truth: when the scope of research becomes too narrow, we risk losing sight of the broader landscape of inquiry. We may become experts in isolated systems of thought, fluent only in the conversations that circulate within a single discipline. But knowledge does not naturally exist in isolation. The world itself is interconnected—its questions overlap, its challenges rarely fall neatly into disciplinary categories. Climate change is not simply a scientific problem; mental health is not only a psychological one; technological advancement is not just an engineering achievement. Each demands ethical, cultural, historical, and humanistic reflection.
To “push the boundary” of research, then, is not to cast aside the value of specialization. Rather, it is to recognize that expertise becomes more powerful when it is placed in conversation with other forms of expertise. Interdisciplinary work invites us to step outside the familiar frameworks of our fields and to encounter different ways of thinking.
This requires humility and curiosity. It requires the patience to listen to concepts expressed in unfamiliar vocabulary, the willingness to approach a problem from an angle that may feel unconventional, and the openness to let our assumptions be unsettled. It is in these moments that new ideas first take shape—emerging not from the comfort of certainty, but from the meeting point of perspectives, methods, and questions.
As a research community, we benefit most when we ask not only “What do I know?” but also “What can I learn from others?” The conversations that arise from such questions are what enable scholarship to evolve—to move beyond repetition and toward discovery.
As a journal committed to fostering thoughtful, rigorous, and imaginative inquiry, we hope to serve as a space where such conversations can unfold. We welcome contributions that cross disciplinary thresholds, challenge inherited categories, and illuminate new ways of seeing.
PJIR Editorial Team
Articles in This Issue
Exploring the Lived Experience of Job Satisfaction
and a Workplace Retention among
Millennial Clinical Social Workers
Author: Demarius Danell Payne, MSW
Affiliation: Capella University
Keywords: clinical social work, millennial workforce, job satisfaction, professional identity, telehealth
Abstract: The focus of this study is to examine the lived experiences related to job satisfaction and workplace retention among millennial clinical social workers. The issues of job satisfaction and workplace retention have emerged as increasingly significant concerns within the millennial clinical social work cohort...
Colonialism in The Chin Hills:
Where God prays with a Gun
Author: Kimpichong Lhouvum
Affiliation: Center for Comparative Literature, University of Hyderabad
Keywords: Chin Hills, colonialism, firearms, Christian missionaries, Thadou
Abstract: This paper explores the paradoxical impact of British colonialism on the Thadou and Chin communities in the Chin Hills, focusing on the simultaneous introduction and increasing prominence of firearms and Christian missionaries between the 1860s and 1910s. Drawing on primary texts like Carey and Tuck’s The Chin Hills...
Healing at a Distance: Narrating Anxiety
and Telemedicine Temporality among Working Finance Mothers in Urban China
Author: Juno Huang
Affiliation: Independent Researcher
Keywords: telemedicine, healthcare, time, anxiety, convenience
Abstract: This paper explores how middle-aged mothers working in the Chinese finance industry narrate the relationship between their use of telemedicine and their experience of anxiety as new mothers. It focuses specifically on the connection between the conceptions of time, motherhood, and the convenience of telemedicine...
A Brief Grammatical Analysis of Urdu Spoken
in Aligarh
Author: Saima Amin
Affiliation: Aligarh Muslim University, India
Keywords: Aligarh, Urdu, language, phonology, morphology, consonants, vowels
Abstract: The objective of this study is to establish the Grammar and Phonology of Aligarh and its districts’ language with a focus on the Urdu language. Aligarh, located in northern India, is a city in the state of Uttar Pradesh. Aligarh is renowned for its rich cultural heritage, educational institutions, and vibrant Urdu literary tradition...
Citation for This Issue
Princeton Journal of Interdisciplinary Research. (2025). Volume 1, Issue 2 — Frontiers of Inquiry. PJIR.
https://www.princeton-press.com/pjir/issues/vol-1-issue-2
Open Access Statement
This journal is fully open access. All articles are freely available to read, download, and share without subscription or access barriers. We encourage scholars to cite and engage with the research published here, as such scholarly exchange plays an important role in supporting emerging and early-career researchers and advancing ongoing academic conversations.