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Executive Overview
This policy has been designed based on the guidelines and recommendations by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE), thus it is our obligation to ensure that the quality of works we publish meet the standards. Our focus as an academic publisher is to preserve the accuracy, integrity, and completeness of the scholarly record by ensuring that we promote honest and most-accurate publishing through stringent policies. Our team of experienced editors, reviewers, and advisors have sworn to respect and uphold these guidelines.
AUTHORSHIP
What is authorship?
According to COPE, The term authorship can refer to the creator or originator of an idea (eg, the author of the theory of relativity) or the individual or individuals who develop and bring to fruition the product that disseminates intellectual or creative works (eg, the author of a poem or a scholarly article). Authorship conveys significant privileges, responsibilities, and legal rights; in the scholarly arena, it also forms the basis for rewards and career advancement. Various disciplines have norms, guidelines, and rules governing authorship; some of those rules preserve the lineage of ideas or works, conception, and production of studies or experiments to validate the theory, analysis of outcomes, and the actual writing of work to disseminate knowledge. Authors are accountable for following discipline-specific guidelines when they engage in authorship activities; journal editors and publishers are accountable for making author guidelines transparent and appropriate for the medium (scholarly books, journal articles, creative writing). At a minimum, authors should guarantee that they have done the work as presented and that they have not violated any other author’s legal rights (eg, copyright) in the process.
Who are eligible authors?
According to the Hybrid Journal of Literary and Cultural Studies, eligible authors are those with the following roles:
Other criteria we use to identify eligible authors
Authorship terms and agreement
Guidelines on solving authorship disputes
COMPETING INTERESTS
Royallite Global has a transparent publications policy and adheres in principle to the Conflict of Interest policy recommended by the COPE. We require that authors, editors, and reviewers declare any relevant competing interests of a personal, professional, or financial nature at the time of submission (for authors) or acceptance to evaluate a manuscript (for editors and reviewers)- for example, financial or personal relationships with other people or organizations that could inappropriately influence or bias their work, or could be perceived to do so.
It is the responsibility of authors to disclose affiliations with any organization with a financial interest, direct or indirect, in the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript (such as consultancies, employment, paid expert testimony, honoraria, speakers bureaus, retainers, stock options or ownership, patents or patent applications or travel grants). All sources of funding for research should be explicitly stated. If uncertain as to what might be considered a potential competing interest, authors should err on the side of full disclosure.
Instances of conflict of interest that must be stated are as follows:
Ethics and consent
All research articles we publish are subject to a rigorous ethical standard. The journal endorses the Code of Conduct of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE), as well as the COPE International Standards for Editors and Authors Guidelines. The Editorial Board of each journal is responsible for the form the peer review process will take; therefore, all authors in the biomedical field must adhere to the Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals. Royalliteglobal endorses the World Association of Medical Editors (WAME) Policy Statement on Geopolitical Intrusion on Editorial Decisions, too.
PLAGIARISM AND OTHER FORMS OF ACADEMIC MALPRACTICES?
Academic dishonesty, fraud or academic misconduct is any type of cheating that occurs in relation to a formal academic exercise. It can include plagiarism, coercive authorship; article publishing gift or honorary authorship.
Plagiarism is the adoption or reproduction of ideas or words or statements of another person without due acknowledgment. This may also include the inability to cite properly or little understanding of Citation Style Languages. A self-citation is a reference to an article by the same author either from the same journal or from other journals.
Plagiarism may vary depending on the level of severity. These are some of the levels in which a work may be plagiarized:
Coercive Translation: This involves the translation of other people’s works to other languages then personalize it without acknowledging the owner.
How to avoid this:
Substantial and Literal Copying: Reproducing a work word for word, in whole or in part, without permission and acknowledgment of the original source.
Implication on research output: It may compromise the research through replication hence no new/significant contribution to the existing literature.
Implication on the author: may destroy your reputation as a scholar.
How to avoid:
Paraphrasing: paraphrasing may be divided into two groups: sham paraphrasing and illicit paraphrasing.
-Sham paraphrasing
Material copied verbatim from text and source acknowledged but represented as paraphrased.
-Illicit paraphrasing
Material paraphrased from text without acknowledgment of the original source.
Implication on research output:
It may compromise the research through replication hence no new/significant contribution to the existing literature.
Implication on the author: it may destroy your reputation as a scholar.
How to avoid:
Self-citation or Text-recycling: Reproducing portions of an author's own work in a paper, and resubmitting it for publication as an entirely new paper.
Implication on research output: it may destroy your reputation as a scholar.
How to avoid:
At Royallite Global, articles with more than 5% plagiarized sources are rejected at the submission stage while self-cited sources denoting similar research are treated as duplicate research. Duplicate articles are those with more than 10% self-citations. We reject them at the submission stage.
Coercive or abusive or promiscuous authorship assumes many forms. “Coercive authorship” is defined as authorship conferred to individuals in response to their exertion of seniority or supervisory status over subordinates and junior researchers or investigators. In simple form, this is the act of awarding authorship to someone who has not contributed to the manuscript in an intellectually significant manner.
At Royallite Global, co-authored works are attributed based on the individual author’s contributions or responsibilities or roles in the research and writing process.
This is the act of acquiring from a third party or contracting ghostwriters to write articles then later publish under your own.
At Royallite Global, we are capable of detecting ownership of the research based on article-level communication strategies. Such articles are rejected at the peer-review process.
This form of practice often occurs when a member of the editorial board of a given journal is paid an unofficial fee to sneak in an unsolicited article for personal gains such as promotion, grant application, or coercive professional growth.
At Royallite Global, after investigation, services from such editors are discontinued at our sole discretion. Our editors do not negotiate on the APCs of the journal. Articles aren’t submitted through editors because the author’s identities should remain unknown at the submission stage unless otherwise.
ARTICLE RETRACTION AND WITHDRAWAL GUIDELINES
We may consider retracting a publication if:
References
Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). How to handle authorship disputes: a guide for new researchers. 2003. Available at: publicationethics.org/files/2003pdf12.pdf. Accessed on June 19, 2019.
Committee on Publication Ethics. Https://publicationethics.org/retraction-guidelines