PLAGIARISM POLICY

Plagiarism is the unethical act of copying another person's previous ideas, processes, results, or words without explicit acknowledgment of the original author and source. Self-plagiarism occurs when an author uses large portions of his or her own previously published work without using appropriate references. This can range from getting the same manuscript published in multiple journals to modifying a previously published manuscript with some new data.

Types of Plagiarism

Full Plagiarism: Previously published content without any changes to the text, ideas, and grammar is considered full plagiarism. This involves presenting the exact text of the source as one's own.

Partial Plagiarism: If the content is a mixture of different sources, where the author has reproduced the text extensively, then it is known as partial plagiarism.

 

Self-Plagiarism: When an author reuses all or part of their previously published research, then it is known as self-plagiarism. Complete self-plagiarism is the case when an author republishes their own previously published work in a new journal.

Must Understand: Full plagiarism, partial plagiarism, and self-plagiarism are not allowed. Authors must ensure that they have written entirely original work, and if the author has used the work and/or words of others, then these have been appropriately cited or cited. An author may not generally publish a manuscript presenting essentially the same research in more than one journal or primary publication. Submitting the same manuscript to more than one journal simultaneously is unethical and unacceptable publishing behavior.

Proper recognition of the work of others should always be given. Authors should cite publications that were influential in determining the nature of the work reported.

The editor will run a plagiarism check using Turnitin for the submitted article before sending it to the reviewer. We do not process plagiarized content. If an article has more than 30% plagiarism based on the inspection results, the article will be rejected. The arrangement of the bibliography for the Nagara Bhakti Journal was carried out using Mendeley (APA 7th) as the reference manager tool.