Plagiarism
Plagiarism Policy
Journal of Global Economic Development and Policy (JOGEDPOL)
Plagiarism Check
Articles submitted to the Journal of Global Economic Development and Policy (JOGEDPOL) will undergo plagiarism screening. JOGEDPOL will immediately reject any manuscripts found to contain plagiarism or self-plagiarism.
Before being sent to reviewers, each submission is screened for similarity by a member of the editorial team. Manuscripts submitted to JOGEDPOL must meet the following criteria:
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Overall similarity score must be below 25% (excluding the bibliography).
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Similarity from any single source must not exceed 1%.
Definition of Plagiarism
Plagiarism is presenting someone else’s ideas or words as your own without proper permission, credit, or citation. This may occur intentionally or unintentionally due to failure to acknowledge sources. Plagiarism can take several forms:
1. Literal Copying
Directly copying another author’s words, sentences, paragraphs, or full text without permission, acknowledgment, or citation. This is identified by comparing the manuscript with the original source.
2. Substantial Copying
Reproducing a significant portion of another person’s work without proper credit. This includes copying large segments or essential parts that impact the intellectual value of the work.
3. Paraphrasing Without Citation
Rewriting ideas or arguments from a source using new sentences but without proper citation. This form is harder to detect but is still considered plagiarism.
Forms of Plagiarism Include (But Are Not Limited To):
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Quoting terms, sentences, data, or information from a source without citation.
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Using phrases or sentences from a source without proper acknowledgment.
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Using ideas, theories, or viewpoints from a source without crediting the original author.
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Rewriting or paraphrasing another author's ideas without proper citation.
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Submitting a scientific paper written or published by someone else as one’s own work.
Prevention
The Journal of Global Economic Development and Policy (JOGEDPOL) ensures that every accepted article complies with the journal’s similarity requirements.
Plagiarism screening is conducted using Turnitin.
Sanctions
Authors found to have committed plagiarism may receive:
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Reprimand
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Warning Letter
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Revocation of Manuscript
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Cancellation of Publication










