Ethical principles of article publication
1. The Legal Studies of Cyberspace Journal follows COPE publishing ethics. Click here.
2. The articles submitted to the quarterly journal of legal studies of virtual space must be the result of research and scientific work of the author or authors and in the specialized field of the quarterly journal.
3. In the articles submitted to the Legal Studies of Cyberspace, the authors must avoid any plagiarism and strictly observe the principles and rules of scientific work in the field of research.
4. When submitting an article to the Legal Studies of Cyberspace, the whole or a part of it should not be in the process of being refereed or published in any journal inside or outside the country at the same time.
5. The corresponding author and other authors are responsible for the accuracy of the content of the articles submitted to the Legal Studies of Cyberspace.
6. Legal Studies of Cyberspace is free to edit, summarize or modify the received articles.
7. The publishers of the Legal Studies of Cyberspace are committed to impartial review of articles and do not discriminate in the various stages of receiving and evaluating articles.
8. The articles submitted to the Legal Studies of Cyberspace will be reviewed based on the date they were received, and no article will be given priority.
9. Legal Studies of Cyberspace does not give any special privilege to any person or article, and only reviews articles based on scientific principles and the announced criteria.
10. The review procedure in Legal Studies of Cyberspace is in the form of Peer Review and the reviewers are committed to impartial evaluation of the articles and review and evaluate the articles only based on scientific and professional criteria.
11. The Cyberspace Legal Studies Quarterly uses Persian and English systems for detecting plagiarism in articles.
12. If it is determined that an article that is being evaluated in the Legal Studies of Cyberspace contains plagiarism, or is not the result of the research and scientific work of its author or authors, at any stage of the evaluation process, it will be exclude the same from further actions.
13. After accepting or publishing an article in the Quarterly Journal of Legal Studies of Cyberspace, if it is found that this article contains plagiarism or is not the result of the research and scientific work of the author or authors, the article will be removed from its system and the same will be informed on its website to its readers. Also, the plagiarism will be informed to the relevant scientific authorities through a letter carrying the journal's seal.