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Allegations of Misconduct
Plagiarism
Plagiarism in any form constitutes unethical publishing behavior and is not acceptable in Jurnal Ekonomi Administrasi dan Sosial (JEAS).
Plagiarism includes, but is not limited to:
- Copying text, ideas, tables, figures, or data from other sources without proper citation and acknowledgment.
- Using another author’s concepts or arguments without attribution.
- Submitting work that substantially overlaps with previously published works without disclosure.
- Self-plagiarism or redundant publication without proper reference to previous publications.
- Paraphrasing another source with minimal modification without proper citation.
Manuscripts identified as containing plagiarism may be rejected during the review process. If plagiarism is discovered after publication, the journal reserves the right to issue corrections, retractions, or other necessary actions.
Data Fabrication
Data fabrication refers to the act of creating false or fictional research data or findings and presenting them as genuine research results.
JEAS strictly prohibits fabricated data in submitted or published manuscripts. Suspected fabrication cases will be investigated thoroughly by the editorial board.
Data Falsification
Data falsification involves manipulating research materials, processes, or data to create misleading conclusions.
This includes altering, omitting, selectively reporting, or modifying research findings in ways that misrepresent the actual results of the study.
Duplicate Submission and Redundant Publication
Duplicate submission occurs when an author submits the same or substantially similar manuscript to more than one journal simultaneously.
Redundant publication includes publishing substantially similar research findings in multiple journals without appropriate disclosure or justification.
JEAS does not permit duplicate submission or redundant publication practices.
Authorship Issues
All listed authors must have made significant contributions to the research and manuscript preparation.
Authorship disputes, guest authorship, honorary authorship, or exclusion of deserving contributors are considered unethical publication practices.
The corresponding author is responsible for ensuring that all co-authors approve the final version of the manuscript prior to submission.
Citation Manipulation
Citation manipulation includes excessive or inappropriate citations intended solely to increase citation counts of authors, journals, or specific publications without academic relevance.
Authors should ensure that all citations are relevant, necessary, and contribute meaningfully to the scholarly discussion.
Manipulation of Peer Review Process
JEAS is committed to maintaining the integrity and fairness of the peer-review process.
Any attempt to manipulate the peer-review system, including providing false reviewer identities, influencing reviewer decisions, or creating conflicts of interest, constitutes serious misconduct.
Editors carefully select independent reviewers to minimize potential bias and conflicts of interest during the review process.
Editorial Actions
If misconduct is suspected or confirmed, the editorial board may take appropriate actions, including:
- Requesting clarification or supporting documents from authors
- Rejecting the manuscript
- Publishing corrections or retractions
- Reporting serious ethical violations to relevant institutions
- Restricting future submissions from authors involved in misconduct





