Plagiarism Notice

AGGIORNAMENTO: Jurnal Filsafat Teologi Kontekstual, as a bilingual journal of interest, would like to ensure that all authors are careful to adhere to international standards for academic integrity, especially when it comes to plagiarism.

Plagiarism occurs when an author takes ideas, information or words from another source without proper credit to the source. Even if it happens unintentionally, plagiarism is still a serious academic offense and is not acceptable in international academic publications.

When the author learns certain information (names, dates, places, statistical numbers or other detailed information) from a specific source, then citation is required.

When the author takes an idea from another colleague, then citation is required - even if the author later develops the idea further. This may relate to an idea of how to interpret the data, whether methodology should be used or what conclusions should be drawn. It may be an idea developed widely in the field or general information. Regardless of the idea, the author must cite the sources. In the case of a writer who develops an idea further, it is still necessary to cite the original source of the idea, and then in the next sentence the writer can further explain the position of the developed idea. When the writer finds that his/her argument is similar to other writings, he/she is also advised to mention the similarity of the arguments with each other.

When a writer takes a sentence from another writer, quotation marks are required. Whenever four or more consecutive words are identical to the source the author is reading, the author must use quotation marks to indicate the use of the other author's original words; quotation alone is not sufficient.

AGGIORNAMENTO: Jurnal Filsafat Teologi Kontekstual takes academic integrity very seriously and the editors reserve the right to withdraw acceptance of any journal that is found to be in violation of the above-mentioned standards.