Publication Ethics

Academic Journals require all authors to adhere to the ethical standards as prescribed by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).

The Basis

In managing journals, Desainpedia holds publication ethics referring to COPE. This statement of scientific code of ethics is a statement of a code of ethics for all parties involved in the publication process of this scientific journal, namely managers, editors, reviewers, and authors. This statement is based on the Head of LIPI Regulation Number 5 of 2014 concerning the Code of Ethics for Scientific Publications, which upholds three ethical values in publications, namely:

  • Neutrality, which is free from conflicting interests in managing publications;
  • Justice, namely giving authorship rights to those entitled as authors/writers;
  • Honesty, i.e. free from duplication, fabrication, falsification, and plagiarism (DF2P) in publications).

Author Responsible

  1. 1. Reporting Standards
    The author of the article in the form of a research report must present an accurate report of the work done and discuss the purpose of the significance of the research. The underlying data must be explained accurately in the research report text. The research report must contain enough detail and references to enable others to emulate the work. Reports containing fraud or intentions regarding inaccurate data are unethical and unacceptable behaviour.
  2. Data Access and Retention
    The author is asked to provide raw data related to editorial needs. The author must be prepared to provide the data within a predetermined time period.
  3. Originality and Plagiarism
    The Author must ensure that the work is written is entirely original and if the author uses the work and or sentences of others then it must use citations or be quoted correctly or paraphrased with his own sentence but still includes the source or references. The practice of taking someone else’s work or ideas and passing them off as one’s own’ Oxford Dictionaries. Thus, all of the submitted manuscripts will be checked by a reputable and premium version of plagiarism software.
  4. Double Publishing or Similarity of Content
    An author should not publish manuscripts that describe the same research essence in more than one journal or publisher. Sending the same text to more than one journal simultaneously is unethical and unacceptable publishing behaviour.
  5. Source of Recognition
    Appropriate recognition of the work of others must always be appreciated. The author must cite influential publications or ideas in determining the nature of the work reported. Authors should use only citations that are relevant to their manuscripts. The addition of references that are not relevant to the work is strongly discouraged. Irrelevant self-citation to increase one’s citation is unethical. Unnecessary citation of articles for the sole purpose of “increasing” the articles’ citation is unethical. Unnecessary citation of articles from a particular journal to “increase” the journal's citation is unethical.
  6. Author Contributor
    The names of authors listed should be limited to those who have made a significant contribution to the concept, design, implementation, or interpretation of the research reported. All people who have contributed significantly must be registered as co-authors. Parties who have participated in certain substantive aspects of the research project must be recognized or registered as contributors. The lead author must ensure that the co-authors whose names are listed in the report are those that are truly eligible to be included and that all co-authors have seen and agreed to the final version of the report and have agreed to publish the report.
  7. Disclosure and Conflict of Interest
    All authors must disclose in the paper report for any financial or substantive conflicts of interest that might be expected to influence the outcome or interpretation of the report.
  8. Basic Mistakes in Published Works
    When the author discovers significant errors or inaccuracies in the published work, the author is obliged to immediately notify the journal editor or publisher and work with the editor to recall or correct the error. Risks and Humans or Animals as subjects if the research involves chemicals, procedures or equipment that are at high risk of their use, the author must mention this in the article.
  9. Fabrication and falsification of data
    Fabrication, manipulation or falsification of data is a violation of this publication ethics. Academic Journals will follow the COPE guidelines in suspected cases of fabrication and falsification of data.

To achieve high-quality publications and meet world-recognized standards of scientific competence, this journal is supported by several experts and people who are competent and committed to advancing science and technology with the task as below.

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

  • Responsible for the quality of publications (principles of fairness, confidentiality, disclosure and conflicts of interest, publication decisions, and review of manuscripts);
  • Responsible for the indexation and recruitment of the team (editorial board and peer reviewers);
  • Contact prospective authors to submit manuscripts and promotion;
  • Select, determine and appoint editor and peer reviewers members based on their expertise;
  • Responsible for regular publishing;
  • Responsible for journal governance;
  • Conduct an overall publishing evaluation.

EDITORIAL BOARD

  1. Fairness
    The editor always evaluates the intellectual content of the manuscript regardless of the race, gender, sexual orientation, religious beliefs, ethnicity, citizenship, or political philosophy of the authors.
  2. Confidentiality
    The editor and any editorial staff are prohibited from disclosing any information about the manuscript submitted to anyone other than the writer, reviewer, potential reviewer, editorial advisors, and publisher.
  3. Disclosure and Conflict of Interest
    Unpublished material but mentioned in a proposed paper may not be used in the editor's personal research without the written consent of the author.
  4. Publication Decision
    The journal editorial board is responsible for deciding articles to be published. The editors can be guided by the policies of the journal editorial board and are limited by legal provisions such as defamation, copyright infringement, and plagiarism. The editors can negotiate with other editors or reviewers in making this decision).
  5. Review Article
    The editor must ensure that each initial manuscript has been evaluated by the editor for originality. Editors must regulate and use peer review fairly and wisely. The editor must explain the peer review process in informing the author and indicating which parts of the journal are reviewed. The editor must use the appropriate peer reviewer for the manuscript to be published by selecting people with sufficient expertise and avoiding people with conflicts of interest.
  6. Other Commitments
    Conduct a review of the eligibility of the manuscript that was charged to her/him in a timely manner (at least 3 weeks) and a minimum of two articles to be reviewed for each issue.
  7. Attending and participating in peer review meetings).

BOARD OF REVIEWERS

  1. Contribute to Editorial Decision
    Peer review helps the editor in making editorial decisions and through the editorial communication with the author can also assist the author in improving the quality of the manuscript.
  2. Timely
    Any reviewer who is selected but feels ineligible to review the research reported in the manuscript or knows that a quick review is impossible is required to notify the editor and excuse himself from the review process.
  3. Objectivity Standards
    Reviews must be conducted objectively. Personal criticism from the author is inappropriate and should be avoided. Reviewers must express their views clearly with supporting arguments.
  4. Confidentiality
    Every script accepted for review must be a confidential document. Manuscripts may not be displayed or discussed with others unless authorized by the editor.
  5. Disclosure and Conflict of Interest
    Important information or ideas obtained through peer review must be kept confidential and not used for personal gain. Reviewers are prohibited from linking texts with conflicts of interest caused by competitive, collaborative, or other relationships and there is a connection with one of the authors, companies or institutions related to the text of the report.
  6. Source Recognition
    Reviewers must identify the work that has been published that is relevant but has not been cited by the author. A statement that observations, derivations or arguments have been reported before must be accompanied by relevant citations. Reviewers must also increase the attention of editors regarding the substantial similarities or overlaps between the reviewed manuscripts and any other published papers that they are aware of.

MANAGING EDITOR

  • Archiving manuscripts sent by the author, review results, and plagiarism checking;
  • Give advice to the Editor about the final decision of the manuscript submitted by the author;
  • Coordinate type-setting the final manuscript to be published;
  • Determine the printing design, layout, and journal cover;
  • With Editor to monitor the process of completing the manuscript being worked on;
  • Coordination article printing and journal distribution;
  • Assist editors in journal management and documentation;
  • Assist the Editor in Chief in preparing journal accreditation.

COVER DESIGN AND LAYOUT

  • Layout the article and cover design based on instructions given by the Chief Editor;
  • Arranging the layout of figures and or tables in the appropriate place in case the article page is found to have too much free space or part of the table or picture to be continued to the next page;
  • Cover design based on themes and current or hot issues;
  • Produce printing designs, layout, and journal covers.