Publication Ethics

PROSPEKTUS, which is a scientific multidisciplinary journal that focuses on studies related to Islamic Education, Islamic Law, Islamic Economics, Islamic Banking, Islamic Psychology, and Islamic Guidance and Counseling as a whole in the context of globalization, is published twice a year in online form by the LP2M Institute of Islamic Religion, IAI Al-Khairat Pamekasan. So this explains the ethical behavior of all parties involved in publishing articles on PROSPEKTUS, including the author, editorial board, and publisher. This statement is based on COPE's Best Practice Guidelines for Journal Editors.

Publishing Ethics Guidelines

Academics can use the PROSPEKTUS Journal as a tool for Islamic sciences, which cover a wide range of fields. Articles published in the PROSPEKTUS journal will be reviewed using the scientific method. Because of this, it is important to agree on standards of expected ethical behavior for all parties involved in publishing, namely: authors, journal editors, publishers, and the public.

LP2M Institute of Islamic Religion (IAI) Al-Khairat, Pamekasan, as a forum for publishing the PROSEPEKTUS journal, is responsible for overseeing all stages of publication in earnest and recognizes ethical and other responsibilities. In addition to being committed to ensuring that reprint advertisements and other commercial revenues do not have an impact on or influence editorial decisions, the agency is also committed to assisting in communication with other journal managers and/or publishers if deemed useful and necessary.

Publishing Decision

The PROSPEKTUS journal's editor is in charge of choosing which of the articles submitted should be published. Article validation is important for researchers and writers, so readers should always support this decision. Editors can be guided by the policies of the journal's editorial board and limited by legal provisions that must be enforced regarding defamation, copyright infringement, and plagiarism. Editors can confer with other editors or the assessment team in making decisions on articles that are entitled to be published.

Fair Treatment

Editors always assess manuscripts based on their intellectual content without distinguishing between race, gender, sexual orientation, religious beliefs, ethnic origins, and nationality of the authors.

Confidentiality

The only people who can get information about submitted manuscripts are the authors, expert editors, and publishers.

Notice and Conflict of Interest

Materials that aren't published or mentioned in submitted manuscripts can't be used in the editor's own research. without the written consent of the author.

Objectivity Standards

The evaluation in the PROSPEKTUS journal is based on facts, while criticizing the author on a personal level is not fair. Assessors must state their views clearly, using supporting arguments.

Source Acknowledgment

Appraisers must identify relevant published work not cited by the author. Any statement that an observation, derivation, or argument has been previously reported must be accompanied by a relevant citation. An evaluator should also ask the editor to pay attention to similarities or overlap between the manuscript being assessed and other published writings.

Notice and Conflict of Interest

Confidential information or opinions learned through an assessment must be kept secret and may not be used for personal gain.Reviewers shouldn't look at manuscripts if they have a conflict of interest with the author, company, or institution that wrote it because they are in a competitive, cooperative, or other relationship with them.

Reporting Standards

The author must present an accurate report of the work done and an objective discussion of its significance. Key data must be represented accurately in writing. A piece of writing should include sufficient detail and references to enable others to repeat the work. Fraudulent or knowingly inaccurate statements constitute unethical behavior and are unacceptable.

Plagiarism

Checking related to plagiarism scanning, the PROSEPKTUS journal uses Turnitin and Google Scholar to see the level of plagiarism in the left-hand articles.