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  • Peer-Review Policy

    Peer-Review Policy

    The journal, "New Achievements in Public Law," employs a double-blind peer-review process. This means that in the article review process, the identities of the reviewers and authors are concealed from each other.

    The stages of article review for the journal, "New Achievements in Public Law," are as follows:

    A. Initial Assessment Stage (3 to 7 working days)

    All submitted articles undergo an initial assessment to ensure compliance with the journal's formatting guidelines, to detect any instances of plagiarism or textual similarity, and to evaluate the article's thematic relevance to the journal's scope. Authors are requested to carefully adhere to these requirements before submitting their articles and to thoroughly review the author guidelines and the journal's thematic scopes.

    B. Peer-Review Stage (1 to 3 months)

    Articles that pass the initial assessment are presented at the editorial board meeting, and those deemed suitable in terms of scientific merit are sent to a minimum of 3 reviewers. At this stage, articles that receive revision comments from 2 or more reviewers will be returned to the corresponding author for revision.

    C. Revision Stage

    The author is required to address the reviewers' requested revisions within a maximum period of 10 days. If the revisions are deemed satisfactory by the reviewers, the revised manuscript is forwarded to the compliance editor. Upon approval of the article by the compliance editor, it is presented at a meeting of the editorial board members for final approval. Subsequently, following acceptance by the editorial board members, a notification email confirming the article's acceptance and forthcoming publication is sent to the corresponding author.

    D. Preparation and Publication Stage

    Following acceptance and payment of the publication fee, the article is placed in the publication queue, and a formal letter confirming the article's final acceptance and publication is dispatched to the copyright holder. Manuscripts submitted to the journal, "New Achievements in Public Law," must not be under concurrent consideration by any other publication, nor should they contain material that has been previously published, in whole or in part.