The International Journal of Law and Advanced Technologies (IJLAT) is a Double blind
peer-reviewed,
journal. The quality and integrity of the works published by the IJLAT are the primary
priorities of the
editorial board, in the conduct, reporting, editing, and reviewing of works. The editorial team
encourages
the highest standards of publication ethics, and takes all reasonable preventative measures
against
publication malpractices through this Publication Ethics Policy.
This Statement has been formulated in line with guidelines recommended by the Committee on
Publication Ethics (COPE). Any person associated with the IJLAT, in the capacity of author,
reviewer, and
editor, are expected to acquaint themselves and adhere to the terms of this policy.
1. Editors
Editors of the IJLAT shall have the following ethical duties:
1.1 Fair Play and Editorial Independence
Editors shall ensure that the submissions received are evaluated objectively, and exclusively on
the basis
of academic merit, without regard to any secondary consideration(s) such as the authors’ ethnic
origin,
religious belief, race, sex, gender, citizenship, political philosophy or institutional
affiliation.
1.2 Publication Decisions
- Notwithstanding the above, the editors shall reject submissions which fail to fulfill legal
requirements in relation to defamation, libel, slander, obscene content or other unlawful
matter.
Further, editors shall also reject submissions which have been plagiarized, the
determination of
which shall be made by the Editorial Board on a case to case basis.
- The Editor-in-Chief has full authority over the content of the journal, and may refuse to
publish a
submission on grounds of misconduct by the author (see §2.2 Conduct of the
Author) .
- If the Journal publishes an article that critiques a previous article published by the
Journal, the
Editors shall ensure that the author(s) of the previous article has an opportunity to
respond to
criticism of their submission; Provided that the author(s) response meets the review
standards of
the Journal.
1.3 Confidentiality
- The editors shall not disclose any information about, or ideas obtained from, a submission
to
anyone besides the author(s), editorial team, reviewers, and the publisher, without the
consent of
the author(s).
1.4 Disclosure and Conflicts of Interest
- The editors shall disclose all relationships that may cause a potential conflict of
interest, and
request a recusal from editorial decisions in which they have or are perceived to have
conflicts of
interest. The Editor-in-Chief may allow such recusal, if the conflict is sufficiently grave,
and
allocate the relevant editorial work to another editor.
- The editors shall not use unpublished material disclosed in a submission for their own
research
purposes without the author’s consent.
- Submissions made by members of the editorial team shall not be accepted for publication in
the
Journal.
1.5 Potential Issues
- The editors shall respond to queries, ethical concerns, and malpractice complaints in a
timely
manner, and endeavor to address the complaints responsibly and sufficiently.
1.6 Investigations
- The editors shall respond to queries, ethical concerns, and malpractice complaints in a
timely
manner, and endeavor to address the complaints responsibly and sufficiently.
1.6 Investigations
- Every reported act of unethical behaviour or malpractice shall be investigated and responded
to
by the current Editorial Board, irrespective of when the concerned issue was published. In
case
such complaint or report involves a member of the Editorial Board, the appropriate
investigation
and decision will be taken by the Advisory Board of the IJLAT.
- There is no temporal limitation on the reporting of unethical behaviour or malpractice.
- In case of substantial plagiarism or repeated acts of malpractice by an author, the
editorial board
may contact the institution where the work was performed. (Also, see Duties and
Responsibilities of Authors)
- If, upon investigation, the alleged unethical behavior or malpractice is proven, the
editorial board
shall publish a clarification, correction, expression of concern, retraction, apology or
other note as
may be relevant in the subsequent issue of the Journal.
1.7 Digital Archiving and Access to Journal Content
- Editors shall take all reasonable steps to ensure that the published issues are securely
preserved,
and that all issues of the Journal are open access and freely available to everyone for easy
accessibility, through maintaining its own digital archive.
2. Authors
The duties and responsibilities of all authors are, including but not limited to, thus:
2.1 Authorship
Authorship of the submitted manuscript should be based on the following criteria:
- Substantial intellectual contribution in either the ideation or conception of the
submission;
- Contribution to drafting of the submission and making subsequent revisions;
- Ability to grant final approval of the version that has to be published;
- Agreement to be responsible and accountable for the accuracy and integrity of all aspects of
the
submission.
- The Journal encourages collaboration and thus, co-authorship. However, the manuscript
submitted should accurately and clearly attribute authorship only to those who meet the
criteria
mentioned above.
- All authors undertake that their submission does not infringe on the copyright or any other
rights
of any third person, nor does it contain anything defamatory, slanderous, libelous, and
obscene or
any other unlawful content.
- All authors agree that they shall be solely responsible in case of any legal violations.
- Contributors who do not meet all the authorship criteria mentioned-above should not be
listed as
authors. However, they should be acknowledged and their contributions should be specified.
- It is the duty of the corresponding author to obtain written permission to be acknowledged
from
all acknowledged individuals. Without such written permission, the Journal shall not publish
acknowledgments for that individual.
- An author may request removal or addition of author(s) after submission, acceptance or
publication. In such a situation, the author shall provide a detailed explanation for the
change and
a signed statement of agreement for such request.
- In case of disputes regarding authorship, the Journal and its editors shall not be
responsible for
the determination of attributing authorship and shall not adjudicate such disputes.
2.2 Conduct of the Author
- The Journal has the right to exercise its discretion to refuse to publish a submission by an author,
if that author(s) has engaged in misconduct.
- It is the duty of the Journal editors to act if they suspect or know of any allegations of any
misconduct or any misconduct committed by an author.
- Misconduct shall include, but shall not be limited to, the following:
- Violations of publication ethics policy of another journal;
- Previous criminal convictions by a court of law in any jurisdiction;
- Ongoing criminal proceedings in any jurisdiction;
- Allegations of, or ongoing proceedings or convictions whether in a court of law or in any
institution or organisation pertaining to, sexual harassment;
- Ongoing disciplinary proceedings, in any institution or organisation, including those
pertaining to ragging or bullying;
- It shall be the duty of the author(s), to disclose any details pertaining to such misconduct to the
Journal, at the earliest possible time.
2.3 Concurrent Submissions and Text Recycling
- The manuscript or any variation of the manuscript submitted to the Journal shall not be
simultaneously submitted elsewhere, nor shall it be submitted to the Journal if it has been
accepted or submitted elsewhere.
- If the submission made to the Journal or any variation of the submission, in whole or in part, has
been published or accepted for publication elsewhere, whether in the same or different language,
the author(s) shall, at the time of submission to the Journal or immediately after receiving
acceptance of publication, whichever is earlier, make a disclosure to that effect to the Journal,
providing all the details of the relevant material. The Journal may ask the author(s) for additional
details pertaining to the relevant publication.
2.4 Originality and Plagiarism
- Plagiarism in all its forms is unethical and is unacceptable. By making a submission to the
Journal, the author(s) undertakes that the manuscript is their original work, has not been
plagiarized and does not contain anything that infringes upon copyright or any other rights of
third parties.
- It is the responsibility of the author(s) to acknowledge their sources and provide appropriate
references in the manner prescribed. Any information obtained through private means (such as
from discussion or conversation with third parties), should not be used to include in the
manuscript without explicit written permission from the concerned third party.
2.5 Conflicts of Interest
- Author(s) shall disclose any potential conflict of interest that may exist, whether financial,
institutional, and personal or any other, which might give the appearance of influence whether in
the content of their manuscript or in the review process.
- Potential conflicts of interest include, among others, any relationship with an Editor of the
Journal, employment, grants, consultancies, representation in a dispute/case and paid expert
testimony.
- It is the responsibility of the author(s) to make such disclosures on conflicts of interest to the
Journal at the earliest possible time.
2.6 Fundamental Errors in Published Works
- If an author(s) discovers fundamental errors in their work published in the Journal, it is their
duty to immediately notify the Journal of such errors and co-operate with the Journal in
rectifying said errors.
- If the editors come to know of such fundamental error(s) in the published work, they shall
provide the author an opportunity to prove the correctness of the work. If this is not proved, it
shall be the duty of the author to co-operate with the Journal in rectifying such errors.
- The editorial board has the discretion to decide in what form and manner the error(s) shall be
rectified.
2.3 Concurrent Submissions and Text Recycling
- The manuscript or any variation of the manuscript submitted to the Journal shall not be
simultaneously submitted elsewhere, nor shall it be submitted to the Journal if it has been
accepted or submitted elsewhere.
- If the submission made to the Journal or any variation of the submission, in whole or in part, has
been published or accepted for publication elsewhere, whether in the same or different language,
the author(s) shall, at the time of submission to the Journal or immediately after receiving
acceptance of publication, whichever is earlier, make a disclosure to that effect to the Journal,
providing all the details of the relevant material. The Journal may ask the author(s) for additional
details pertaining to the relevant publication.
3. Publishers
Publishers shall have the following duties:
3.1 Prompt and Proper Handling of Unethical Publishing Behaviour
- Upon notification by the editor(s) of any proven unethical behaviour or malpractice, the publisher
shall take appropriate measures to amend the work in question, in accordance with the directions
of the editor(s). This may involve the prompt publication of clarification(s), correction(s),
expression of concern(s), apologies or other note(s) as may be relevant in the journal, or the
retraction of the impugned work, where such work has already been published.
- The publisher shall reasonably cooperate with the editor(s) in identifying and preventing the
publication of unpublished work(s) whose author has been proven to have engaged in unethical
behaviour or malpractice.
3.2 Digital Archiving and Access to Journal Content
- Publishers shall reasonably cooperate with the editorial board to ensure that the published
material is securely preserved, and that all issues of the Journal are open access and freely
available to everyone for easy accessibility, through maintaining own digital archive.
4. Peer Reviewers
The duties and responsibilities of the Peer Reviewer have been laid down in the IJLAT Peer Review Policy.
5. Miscellaneous
- The Journal’s Editorial Board shall determine whether the guidelines mentioned above have been
violated its decision shall be final.
- The Journal has the right to exercise its discretion to reject, retract, modify or refuse future
submissions if the above-mentioned guidelines have been violated.
- The Journal’s Editorial Board has the right to amend the Publication Ethics policy at any time.
- In case the present statement does not cover a sui generis event or situation, the Journal’s
Editorial Board has the discretion to arrive at a decision based on general principles and intent of
this Statement, as well as by reference to best practices and guidelines issued by the Committee
on Publication Ethics (COPE).