- Focus and Scope
- Section Policies
- Peer Review Process
- Open Access Policy
- Open Access Policy
- Screening for Plagiarism
Focus and Scope
Focus and Scope
- JEBT (Print ISSN 1858 – 1218, Online ISSN 2685 - 7359) is a place for Accounting, Management, Economics, and sharia economic studies related to business practices including taxation aspects so that they can contribute to practitioners and academics in the field of business and applied economics Universitas Padjadjaran. JEBT also accepts articles relating to the following fields of study but is not limited to:
1. Microeconomics - Macroeconomics
- Entrepreneurship
- Accounting
- Information System
- Taxation
- ShariaEconomy
- Management
Section Policies
Articles
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Peer Review Process
All submitted manuscripts are read by the editorial staff. Those manuscripts evaluated by editors to be inappropriate to journal criteria are rejected promptly without external review. Manuscripts evaluated to be of potential interest to our readership are sent to double-blind reviewers. The editors then make a decision based on the reviewer’s recommendation from among several possibilities: rejected, require major revision, need minor revision, or accepted.
The Editor-in-Chief of the JurnalEkonomidanBIsnisTerapan (JEBT) has the right to decide which manuscripts submitted to the journal should be published.
Open Access Policy
This journal provides immediate open access to its content on the principle that making research freely available to the public supports a greater global exchange of knowledge.
Open Access Policy
This journal provides immediate open access to its content on the principle that making research freely available to the public supports a greater global exchange of knowledge.
Screening for Plagiarism
Plagiarism screening will be conducted JEBT. Editorial Board will not tolerate for any plagiarism. Therefore, Author should check their article through plagiarism checker application. For instance, turnitin application or other applications. If an article is indicated as a plagiary, it will be rejected and will not be reviewed.
The manuscript that is submitted to JurnalEkonomidanBIsnisTerapan (JEBT) will be screened for similarity check using Turnitin. Manuscript found to contain a similarity index percentage higher than 30% (including self-plagiarism) will be rejected
All authors are deemed to be individually and collectively responsible for the content of papers published by the JurnalEkonomidanBIsnisTerapan (JEBT). Therefore, it is the responsibility of each author to ensure that papers submitted to JEBT attain the highest ethical standards with respect to plagiarism.
According to Regulation No. 7/2010 of the Ministry of Education of the Republic of Indonesia, “Plagiarism is the intentional and unintentional practice of obtaining or trying to obtain credit or value from a scientific work without stating the source appropriately and adequately.” Another definition from the Oxford American Dictionary in Clabaugh (2001), is that “Plagiarism is to take and use another person’s ideas or writing or inventions as to one’s own.” The Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary explains the word "plagiarize" as “stealing and passing off (the ideas or words of another) as one's own, using (another's production) without crediting the source, committing literary theft, presenting as new and original an idea or product derived from an existing source.” Plagiarism manifests itself in a variety of forms, including (adopted from ACM with some modification):
- Verbatim copying, near-verbatim copying, or purposely paraphrasing portions of another author's paper;
- Copying elements of another author's paper, such as equations or illustrations that are not common knowledge, or copying or purposely paraphrasing sentences without citing the source;
- Verbatim copying of portions of another author's paper, while citing but not clearly differentiating what text has been copied (e.g., not applying quotation marks correctly) and/or not citing the source correctly.
Self-plagiarism is a related issue. Self-plagiarism is defined as “The verbatim or near-verbatim reuse of significant portions of one's own copyrighted work without citing the original source.” Self-plagiarism does not apply to publications based on the author's own previously copyrighted work (e.g., appearing in conference proceedings) where an explicit reference is made to the prior publication. Such reuse does not require quotation marks to delineate the reused text but does require that the source is cited.