Publishing Ethical PolicyClick Here to Download Publication Ethical Policy in MS Word Format
The Journal of Social Sciences Review (JSSR) The ethical policy of the JSSR follows the Standard Code of Conduct for Research Integrity. Authors must be honest in presenting their results and conclusions of their research. Research misconduct is harmful to knowledge. It could mislead other researchers.
Fabrication, falsification, or selective reporting of data with the intent to mislead or deceive is unethical, as is the theft of data or research results from others. The results of the research should be recorded and maintained to allow for analysis and review. Following publication, the data should be retained for a reasonable period and made available upon request. Exceptions may be appropriate in certain circumstances to preserve privacy, assure patent protection, or similar reasons.
Reproducing text from other papers without properly crediting the source (plagiarism) or producing many papers with almost the same authors' content (self-plagiarism) is not acceptable. Submitting the same results to more than one journal concurrently is unethical. Exceptions are the review articles. Authors may not present results obtained by others as if they were their own. Authors should acknowledge others' work in their research and cite publications that have influenced their study's direction and course.
Simultaneous submissions of the same manuscript to different journals will not be tolerated. The submitted article will be removed without consideration.
All authors must inform and cooperate with journal editors to provide prompt retractions or correct errors in published works. The journal will issue retractions if:
Note: Date: ________________________ Corresponding author’s signature: __________________________ The Journal of Social Sciences Review (JSSR) The ethical policy of the JSSR follows the Standard Code of Conduct for Research Integrity. Authors must be honest in presenting their results and conclusions of their research. Research misconduct is harmful to knowledge. It could mislead other researchers. · Research result Fabrication, falsification, or selective reporting of data with the intent to mislead or deceive is unethical, as is the theft of data or research results from others. The results of the research should be recorded and maintained to allow for analysis and review. Following publication, the data should be retained for a reasonable period and made available upon request. Exceptions may be appropriate in certain circumstances to preserve privacy, assure patent protection, or similar reasons. · Plagiarism Reproducing text from other papers without properly crediting the source (plagiarism) or producing many papers with almost the same authors' content (self-plagiarism) is not acceptable. Submitting the same results to more than one journal concurrently is unethical. Exceptions are the review articles. Authors may not present results obtained by others as if they were their own. Authors should acknowledge others' work in their research and cite publications that have influenced their study's direction and course. · Duplicate submission Simultaneous submissions of the same manuscript to different journals will not be tolerated. The submitted article will be removed without consideration. · Corrections and retractions All authors must inform and cooperate with journal editors to provide prompt retractions or correct errors in published works. The journal will issue retractions if: § There is clear evidence that the findings are unreliable, either as a result of misconduct (e.g., data fabrication) or honest error (e.g., miscalculation or experimental error); § The findings have previously been published elsewhere without proper cross-referencing, permission, or justification (i.e., cases of redundant publication); § It constitutes plagiarism; § It reports unethical research. · The journal will issue errata if: § A small portion of an otherwise reliable publication proves to be misleading (especially because of honest error); § The author list is incorrect (i.e., a deserving author has been omitted, or somebody who does not meet authorship criteria has been included). § Other forms of misconduct- misrepresentation of interests, breach of confidentiality, lack of informed consent, and abuse of research subjects or materials. § Minor misdemeanors may not lead to formal investigations but are just as damaging given their probable frequency and corrected by teachers and mentors. · Principles of research integrity · Reliability in ensuring the quality of research is reflected in the design, the methodology, the analysis, and the use of resources. · Honesty in developing, undertaking, reviewing, reporting, and communicating research in a transparent, fair, full, and unbiased way. · Respect for colleagues, research participants, society, ecosystems, cultural heritage, and the environment. · Accountability for the research from idea to publication, for its management and organization, for training, supervision and mentoring, and its wider impacts. Note: Date: ________________________ Corresponding author’s signature: __________________________
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