Publication Ethics

1. Reporting; The author must provide information about the process and results of his research to the editor honestly, clearly, and thoroughly, and keep his research data properly and safely.
2. Originality and plagiarism; the author must ensure that the manuscript that has been sent/submitted to the editor is the original manuscript, written by himself, sourced from his own ideas and ideas, and not plagiarizing the written work or ideas/ideas of others. Authors are strictly prohibited from changing the names of the cited reference sources to other people's names.
3. Repeat delivery; the author must inform that the manuscript sent/submitted to the editor is a manuscript that has never been submitted/submitted to another journal/publication publisher. If there is a "redundancy" in sending the manuscript to another publisher, the editor will reject the manuscript sent by the author.
4. Author status; the author must inform the editor that the author has competence or qualifications in a particular field of expertise in accordance with the published field of science, namely librarianship. The author who sends the manuscript to the editor is the first author (co-author) so that if a problem is found in the process of publishing the manuscript, it can be resolved immediately.
5. Script writing errors; the author must immediately inform the editor if errors are found in the writing of the manuscript, both the results of the review and the edits. The writing errors include writing names, affiliations/agencies, quotes, and other writings that can reduce the meaning and substance of the manuscript. If that happens, the author must immediately propose improvements to the manuscript.
6. Disclosure of conflicts of interest; the author must understand the ethics of scientific publications above to avoid conflicts of interest with other parties, so that the manuscript can be processed smoothly and safely.