Publications ethics

Publication Ethics and Publication Malpractice Statement

The publication of a peer-reviewed journal requires continuous work, responsibility, liability, and collaboration from all involved parties: authors, reviewers, editors and board members. The editors have the responsibility of keeping/monitoring the publishing ethics and maintaining the academic record. The Executive and Advisory Editorial Board assume their responsibility on verifying the articles of fraudulent data or plagiarism. The editorial team’s goal is to maintain the publication at the highest publication standards, implying: good quality, original, research-based articles, but also corrections, clarifications, retractions, and apologies, if needed. We appreciate the contributions of every involved party to the work that we publish.

Publication and authorship

  • All submitted papers are subject to strict blind peer review process by at least three national and international reviewers;
  • The rejected articles are not being resent for reviewing;
  • The papers before being sent for review are first checked by anti-plagiarism software. Authors should provide all sources of data used in the research. Plagiarism in all its forms is unethical and it is unacceptable.

Authors' responsibilities

  • Authors must ensure that the submitted article is their original work, which has not been previously published;
  • Authors must ensure that the submitted article has not been considered for publication elsewhere;
  • Authors must state that all data in the paper are real and authentic;
  • Authors must report any errors in their published paper to the Editors;
  • Authors should provide a revised version of their article, according to the reviewers' recommendations.

Reviewers' responsibilities

  • Any manuscript received for review will be treated as a confidential document;
  • Reviewers should identify relevant published work that has not been cited by the authors;
  • Reviews should be conducted objectively, and observations should be formulated clearly with supporting arguments so that authors can use them for improving the paper;
  • Reviewers should inform the editors on any substantial similarity between the manuscript under consideration and any other published paper;
  • Reviewers should not consider manuscripts in which they have conflicts of interest resulting from competitive, collaborative, or other relationships or connections with any of the authors, companies, or institutions connected to the papers.

Editors' responsibilities

  • Editors decide which of the articles submitted to the journal should be published;
  • Editors are responsible for the contents and overall quality of the publication;
  • Editors should evaluate manuscripts exclusively on the basis of their academic merit;
  • Peer review assists the editors in making editorial decisions. Editors should publish only peer-reviewed accepted articles;
  • Editors should have a clear picture of a research's funding sources;
  • An editor must not use unpublished information in the editor's own research without the express written consent of the author.