Screening of Plagiarism
Manuscripts submitted to Gender, Islamic Law, and Sustainability will be screened for plagiarism using the Turnitin plagiarism detection tool. GILS will immediately reject papers that show signs of plagiarism or self-plagiarism and return them to the authors for correction. The maximum similarity index we accept is 30% (with no individual reference exceeding 25%). GILS is committed to ensuring that all authors adhere to international standards for academic integrity, particularly concerning plagiarism. Plagiarism occurs when an author takes ideas, information, or words from another source without properly crediting the source. Even if unintentional, plagiarism is still a serious academic violation and is unacceptable in international academic publications.
- When authors obtain specific information (such as a name, date, place, statistical number, or other detailed information) from a specific source, a citation is required.
- If an author takes an idea from another author, even if the idea is further developed, a citation is required. This could be an idea about how to interpret data, what methodology to use, or what conclusions to draw. Even if the idea is further developed, the original source must be cited.
- If an author directly takes words from another author, both a citation and quotation marks are required. If four or more consecutive words are identical to a source, quotation marks must be used to indicate the original words, as just citing the source is no longer sufficient.
DiSoLife takes academic integrity very seriously, and the editors reserve the right to withdraw acceptance from any paper found to violate the above standards.
For further information, potential authors can contact the editorial office at gils.journal@wiseedu.co.id.