Peer Review Process
To ensure the highest standards of quality, rigor, and relevance, all submissions will undergo a meticulous and unbiased peer-review process, guided by leading experts in the field. This process helps maintain the integrity and impact of all published work.
The peer-review process is conducted in the following stages:
-
The submitted manuscript is first reviewed by the editor to determine whether it aligns with the journal’s focus and scope, contains any major methodological flaws, or has a high similarity score (checked using Turnitin). Based on this assessment, the manuscript will either be rejected or passed on to the review stage.
-
Manuscripts accepted for review are sent to at least two anonymous reviewers using a Single Blind Review system.
-
The reviewers submit their comments and recommendations to the editor.
-
The editor evaluates the reviewers’ feedback and makes a preliminary decision, which is then communicated to the corresponding author. The possible decisions are: accept, revise, or reject.
-
If revision is required, the author submits a revised version. The editor evaluates the changes and determines whether the paper is acceptable, needs further revision, or should be rejected.
-
Once accepted, the manuscript proceeds to the copyediting and layout editing stages to produce the final camera-ready version for publication.
Review Outcomes
Based on the peer review process, the editor will make one of the following decisions:
-
Reject: The manuscript is not suitable for publication and cannot be resubmitted.
-
Accept with Major Revisions: The manuscript requires substantial changes and will undergo another round of review after revision.
-
Accept with Minor Revisions: Minor modifications are needed; the editor will verify the changes before publication.
-
Accept: The manuscript is accepted in its current form and will be published without further modifications.
Reviewers’ Responsibilities
All invited reviewers are expected to:
-
Review manuscripts critically and constructively to help authors improve their work.
-
Review multiple versions of a manuscript if needed.
-
Provide comments and recommendations within the assigned deadline.
-
Recommend whether the manuscript is suitable for publication.
-
Disclose any potential conflict of interest related to the manuscript or its authors.
-
Report any suspected research misconduct to the editor.
-
Decline review and suggest alternative reviewers if unable to complete the task.
-
Treat the manuscript as confidential.
-
Not use the content for personal benefit.
-
Avoid direct communication with the author.
-
Remain anonymous and not reveal their identity.
-
Not pass the manuscript to another reviewer.
-
Ensure the manuscript reflects original, high-quality research.
-
Inform the editor if the manuscript is under consideration elsewhere.
-
Write review reports in English only.
-
Optionally, write a commentary related to the reviewed manuscript if appropriate.
Key review criteria include:
-
Novelty and originality
-
Scientific reliability
-
Contribution to the field
-
Ethical compliance
-
Structural and formatting consistency
-
Proper and relevant references
-
Grammar, punctuation, and spelling
-
Scientific integrity and misconduct awareness