Withdrawal is an action that takes the manuscript out of the review process and places it back into the author's dashboard.
Our View Regarding Withdrawal: In General, we do not suggest the article withdrawal, since it wastes valuable manuscript processing time, cost and works spent by the publisher.
Withdrawal Steps:
- Pre-Review: is periods at which the author(s) submit(s) her/his article until to be sent for the review.
- Peer-Review: is a period at which the manuscript is submitted completely to the website and is included in the review process.
- Review-Final Decision: is a period from the acceptance of an article until to be sent for publication if the article meets the journal standards.
- Post-Publication: when a paper is published (online and/or hard copy).
Regulations:
- Pre-Review: The author(s) can withdraw their papers at this step without paying any charges and/or posing compelling reasons.
- Peer-Review: The authors must have compelling reasons and pay withdrawal fee.
- Review-Final Decision: The authors must have their compelling reasons and pay the withdrawal penalty.
- Post-Publication: Withdrawing at this step is not possible at all.
What Are Compelling Reasons?
- Plagiarism
- Bogus claims of authorship
- Multiple submissions
- Fraudulent use of data or the like
- Infringements of professional ethical codes
View: 5067 Time(s) |
Print: 1055 Time(s) |
Email: 0 Time(s) |
0 Comment(s)