Editorial Policies
Peer Review Process
All
submissions to
International Journal of South
American Archaeology - IJSA (eISSN
2011-0626), (eISP
0840-2912-4861) are initially
assessed by an Editor, who
decides whether or not the
article is suitable for peer
review. Submissions considered
suitable for peer review are
assigned to two or more
independent experts, who assess
the article for clarity,
validity, and sound methodology.
Authors may be invited to
recommend or ask for the
exclusion of specific
individuals from the peer
review process. The journal
does not guarantee to use these
suggestions. All reviewers must
be independent from the
submission and will be asked to
declare all competing interests.
The
International Journal of South
American Archaeology - IJSA (eISSN
2011-0626), (eISP
0840-2912-4861) operates a
double-blind peer review
process, meaning that authors
and reviewers remain anonymous
for the review process. The
review period is expected to
take around four to eight weeks,
although this may vary depending
on reviewer availability.
Reviewers are asked to provide
formative feedback, even if an
article is not deemed suitable
for publication in the journal.
Based on the reviewer reports
the editor will make a
recommendation for rejection,
minor or major revisions, or
acceptance. Overall editorial
responsibility rests with the
journal’s Editor-in-Chief, who
is supported by an expert,
international
Editorial
Board.
The
International Journal of South
American Archaeology - IJSA (eISSN
2011-0626), (eISP
0840-2912-4861) is happy to
accept submissions of papers
that have been loaded onto
preprint servers or personal
websites, have been presented at
conferences, or other informal
communication channels. These
formats will not be deemed prior
publication. Authors must retain
copyright to such postings.
Authors are encouraged to link
any prior posting of their paper
to the final published version
within the journal, if it is
editorially accepted.
Reviewer
Guidelines
Reviewers
are asked to provide comment on
the below topics and guidelines:
-
Content: Does the article fit
within the scope of the journal?
Is the submission original,
relevant and rigorous? Is the
author’s depth of understanding
of the issues researched
adequate? Are the sources and
references adequate? Has the
existing knowledge base been
explored and built upon? Are the
chosen methodologies appropriate
and have they and the evidential
base been appropriately used?
Does the conclusion reflect the
argument in the main body text
and bring something new to the
debate?
-
Structure and argument:
Does the
abstract summarise the arguments
in a succinct and accurate way?
Is the manuscript logically
structured and do the arguments
flow coherently? Is there enough
reference to methodology in the
introduction and are the
arguments fully evidenced and
substantiated? Does the
introduction signpost the
arguments in the logical way and
does the conclusion adequately
summarise them?
-
Figures/tables: Does the
author’s use of tables, charts,
figures or maps illustrate the
arguments and support the
evidential base? Is the quality
of the formatting and
presentation adequate
-
Formatting: Does the submitted
file adhere to the general
author guidelines listed for the
journal? Are the citations and
references formatted to
house-style?
-
Language: Is the text well
written and jargon free? Please
comment on the quality of
English and need for grammatical
improvement.
Reproducibility
Open Data
The journal strongly encourages
authors to make all data
associated with their submission
openly available, according to
the FAIR principles (Findable,
Accessible, Interoperable,
Reusable). This should be linked
to from a Data Accessibility
Statement within the submitted
paper, which will be made public
upon publication. . If data is
not being made available with
the journal publication then
ideally a statement from the
author should be provided within
the submission to explain why.
Data obtained from other sources
must be appropriately credited.
Structured Methods
As the traditional Materials and
Methods section often includes
insufficient detail for readers
to wholly assess the research
process, the journal encourages
authors to publish detailed
descriptions of their structured
methods in open, online
platforms such as protocols.io.
By providing a step-by-step
description of the methods used
in the study, the chance of
reproducibility and usability
increases, whilst also allowing
authors to build on their own
works and gain additional credit
and citations.
Open Code
If research includes the use of
software code, statistical
analysis or algorithms then we
also recommend that authors
upload the code into Code Ocean,
where it will be hosted on an
open, cloud-based computational
reproducibility platform,
providing researchers and
developers with an easy way to
share, validate and discover
code published in academic
journals.
For more information on how to
incorporate open data,
protocols.io or Code Ocean into
a submission, please visit our
reproducibility page.
Preprint Policy
The
International Journal of South
American Archaeology - IJSA (eISSN
2011-0626), (eISP
0840-2912-4861) allows
authors to deposit draft
versions of their paper into a
suitable preprint server, on
condition that the author agrees
to the below:
-
The author retains copyright to
the preprint and developed works
from it, and is permitted to
submit it to the journal.
-
The author declares that a
preprint is available within the
cover letter presented during
submission. This must include a
link to the location of the
preprint.
-
The author acknowledges that
having a preprint publicly
available means that the journal
cannot guarantee the anonymity
of the author during the review
process, even if they anonymise
the submitted files (see review
policy).
-
Should the submission be
published, the authors are
expected to update the
information associated with the
preprint version to show that a
final version has been published
in the journal, including the
CIREX-iD linking directly to the
publication.
ORCID
The
International Journal of South
American Archaeology - IJSA (eISSN
2011-0626), (eISP
0840-2912-4861)
strongly recommends that all
authors submitting a paper
register an account with Open
Researcher and Contributor
Identifier (ORCID). Registration
provides a unique and persistent
digital identifier for the
account that enables accurate
attribution and improves the
discoverability of published
papers, ensuring that the
correct author receives the
correct credit for their work.
As the ORCID remains the same
throughout the lifetime of the
account, changes of name,
affiliation, or research area do
not effect the discoverability
of an author's past work and aid
correspondence with colleagues.
The
International Journal of South
American Archaeology - IJSA (eISSN
2011-0626), (eISP
0840-2912-4861)encourages all corresponding
authors to include an ORCID
within their submitting author
data whilst co-authors are
recommended to include one.
ORCID numbers should be added to
the author data upon submission
and will be published alongside
the submitted paper, should it
be accepted.
Competing Interests, Funding and
Ethics
To ensure transparency, all
authors, reviewers and editors
are required to declare any
interests that could compromise,
conflict or influence the
validity of the publication.
Competing interests guidelines
can be viewed here.
In addition, authors are
required to specify funding
sources and detail requirements
for ethical research in the
submitted manuscript (see Author
Guidelines). All authors must
confirm that they fit the
definition of an author (see
Authorship Guidelines), during
submission.
Corrections and Retractions
Syllaba Press
International Inc. handles different
kinds of error in accordance
with guidelines from the
Committee on Publication Ethics
(COPE), where applicable. All
articles have their proofs
checked prior to publication by
the author/editor, which should
ensure that content errors are
not present. Please contact the
editorial manager if you believe
an article needs correcting.
Post-publication changes are not
permitted to the publication,
unless in exceptional
circumstances. If an error is
discovered in a published
article then the publisher will
assess whether a Correction
paper or Retraction is required.
This ensures that the error can
be appropriately corrected,
whilst the integrity of the
publication record is not
broken. Please contact the
publisher for the full
Correction/Retraction policy.
Misconduct and Complaints
Allegations of misconduct will
be taken with utmost
seriousness, regardless of
whether those involved are
internal or external to the
journal, or whether the
submission in question is pre-
or post-publication. All
reasonable steps will be taken
to identify and prevent the
publication of papers where
research misconduct has
occurred, including plagiarism,
citation manipulation, and data
falsification/fabrication. If an
allegation of misconduct is made
to the journal, it must be
immediately passed on to the
publisher, who will follow
guidelines from the Committee on
Publication Ethics (COPE) on how
to address the nature of the
problem. Should the matter
involve allegations against a
member of the journal or
publishing team, an independent
and objective individual(s) may
be sought to lead the
investigation.
Should an author wish to lodge a
complaint against an editorial
decision or the editorial
process in general they should
first approach the
Editor-in-Chief of the journal,
explaining their complaint and
ask for a reasoned response.
Should this not be forthcoming
or inadequate, they should raise
the matter with the publisher,
who will investigate the nature
of the complaint and act as
arbiter on whether the complaint
should be upheld and
investigated further. This will
follow guidelines set out by
COPE. |
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