Редакция саясаты
- Журнал тақырыбы
- Рецензиялау
- Кезеңділігі
- Еркін қолжетімділік саясаты
- Cost of publication
- Publication Ethics
Журнал тақырыбы
The journal "Economics and Business: Theory and Practice" is a peer-reviewed academic publication devoted to current issues in economic theory and practice, management, finance, marketing, entrepreneurship, and innovation. The journal's target audience includes researchers, university professors, graduate and master's students, and undergraduate students, as well as business executives and specialists from businesses and government agencies.
Рецензиялау
All manuscripts submitted to the editors undergo mandatory single-blind peer review. The review period is 2 to 4 weeks. Reviewers are selected from among leading experts in the relevant field. The decision to publish is made by the editor-in-chief based on the reviewers' conclusions and recommendations of the editorial board members.
Article Review Procedure
After an article is submitted to the editors, it is reviewed for compliance with established requirements, as well as political and religious ethics.
If the initial review is successful, the article is sent for review to an external reviewer or one of the editorial board members, who, within 3 weeks, writes a review with the following structure:
— the relevance of the work;
— the conformity of the work's structure with established requirements;
— the novelty and nature of the work (problem-based or review);
— the practical and theoretical significance of the research;
— comments and suggestions for improving the article, if any;
— a recommendation for the peer-reviewed article for publication in the journal.
If the submitted article requires revision, the author is asked to make changes or additions to the work, with a brief description of possible options.
If necessary, stylistic and spelling corrections are made to the text with the author's consent.
Кезеңділігі
The magazine is published monthly.
Еркін қолжетімділік саясаты
The journal provides open access to its materials in accordance with the principles of free dissemination of knowledge.
Cost of publication
If the article is approved for publication, the editors will invoice the author for publishing services (no advance payment is required):
Article publication (per page): 320 rubles
Printed copy of the journal, including shipping within the Russian Federation (per copy): 590 rubles
Printed copy of the journal, including shipping outside the Russian Federation (per copy): 2,000 rubles
Access to the electronic version: Free
Electronic publication confirmation: Free
DOI: Free
Publication Ethics
According to the recommendations of the ASRI Scientific Publication Ethics Council, the following is unacceptable when writing scientific papers:
Friendly citation is the intentional citation by an author of the works of colleagues or members of their own research team, regardless of the scientific significance of these works, their relevance to the topic, or the content and quality of the research. The main purpose of such citations is to increase citation rates and improve scientometric indicators, which may lead to a decrease in the quality of the scientific publication.
Duplicate publication is the repeated publication of the same scientific article (or a significant portion of it) in different publications without citing the original source.
Excessive self-citation is an author's unreasonably large number of references to their previously published works. Although self-citation is a normal part of the scientific process, its excessive use can distort the true significance of the author's work and artificially inflate scientometric indicators such as the citation index or h-index.
A conflict of interest is a situation in which the personal interests or biases of interested parties (e.g., the interests of a founder, employer, competitor, or funding organization) may influence the validity of scientific results and the objectivity of conclusions obtained during research or peer review. The main types of conflicts of interest are financial, personal, and professional interest.
Citation manipulation is the use of sources unrelated to the topic of the article by an author in a scientific article to boost their own scientometric performance, as well as that of their colleagues, supervisors, or the scientific journals with which they are affiliated. Citation manipulation is aimed at artificially increasing the number of citations to an article or the author.
Duplicate submission (or multiple submission) is the simultaneous or close submission of the same manuscript to different publications with the goal of guaranteeing publication in one of them, without notifying the editors that the article has also been submitted to other publications. This is a violation of publication ethics, as accepting an article for publication in multiple journals can lead to duplication of scientific content and violation of publishers' rights.
Busting publication metrics (also known as manipulation of scientometric indicators or inflation of bibliometric indicators) is a violation of publication ethics that involves artificially inflating scientometric indicators, such as the impact factor, h-index, or the number of publications, in order to enhance the reputation of a scientist or scientific institution. This may include excessive self-citation, contractual citations between authors, duplicate publications, editorial coercion of authors to cite, and other forms of distortion of actual scientific achievements.
Unethical peer review practices involve using information from a peer-reviewed manuscript for one's own research or biased peer review in order to hinder the publication process of competitors or in other cases of conflict of interest.
Incorrect citation (improper citation) is the use of scientific ideas, texts (text fragments), and other objects created by other authors, verbatim or paraphrased, in violation of established citation rules. Incorrect citation may include: plagiarism, misattribution (incorrectly attributing a quote or idea to another author or source), citing non-existent sources, excessive self-citation, and excessive citation to artificially inflate the importance of certain sources.
Inaccurate citation (unattributed citation, plagiarism) is the use of scientific ideas, texts (text fragments), and other objects created by other authors without proper attribution and citation of the original source. Undocumented borrowing is a type of plagiarism and may include: direct copying of text without quotation marks or other means or references to the source, paraphrasing other people's ideas or research without attribution, and using data or graphs created by other researchers without citing their work.
Translation plagiarism is the use of a translation of a previously published text in another language in an article without citing the original source. The main types of translation plagiarism are: direct translation of a text from one language to another without attribution to the author and/or source, paraphrasing a translation with minor changes without citing the original text.
Plagiarism is the appropriation of scientific ideas and texts (text fragments) previously published by other authors, as well as