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Author Guidelines

  1. Article Submission

All author’s materials (articles) submitted for publication in the journal “MANAGEMENT SCIENCES” must be prepared in accordance with the following requirements. Manuscripts that do not have proper form will not be accepted.

An author may submit an article if that article (either the same or substantially similar) has previously been under consideration with another publisher or journal (including other journals edited by Financial University under the Government of Russian Federation). However, the author must have formal written evidence of the rejection or withdrawal of the article from the original place of submission. Once the article has been submitted, the author must email this written evidence to vestnikfinu@mail.ru, requesting that it be added to the submission.

The author must be the owner of the copyright and be entitled to sign the Copyright Agreement. In submitting an article, the author complies with these conditions. In addition, the publisher reserves the right to re-referee and/or reject an accepted article if the article does not meet the criteria outlined in the review form or if the article is in some other way deemed possibly unsuitable.

If the Author wishes to abandon the review process or remove his/her article from elsewhere in the system before publication, the article must be formally withdrawn in writing before it can be submitted to another journal. Non-compliance with any of the above conditions may result in sanctions.

Manuscripts should be topical, important from scientific and practical points of view, with clearly structured composition (problem statement, solutions, conclusions and proposals).

Publication in  «Management Sciences»  is free of charge for all the authors.
The journal doesn't have any Arcticle processing charges.

  1. Article Preparation

2.1. The article should be written in good Russian or in English. The volume of articles (excluding abstract, information about authors and references) should be 4 to 6 thousand words.

2.2. All articles must be written in Russian or UK English. If English is not your first language, please ask an English-speaking colleague to proofread your article.

2.3. Submissions may be formatted in single or double spacing, preferably in Times New Roman size 12 font. All accepted articles will be correctly formatted for publication. The text of the article should include the following metadata in Russian or UK English.

  • title (as short as possible, with no abbreviations or acronyms)
  • the name(s) of author(s) and their biographical notes (surname, name and patronymic of the author(s); academic degree, academic title, honorary title (if any); position, place of work; name of organization; contact information: e-mail, city, country, contact phone numbers for communication with the editorial Board)
  • ORCID – a unique number of the author, which allows to identify his/her publications, patents, grants received and other results of scientific activity (to obtain this unique number should every author ought to register on the website http://orcid.org/)
  • subject descriptors of JEL or UDK classification system
  • abstract (200–250 words)
  • keywords (8–10 words)

main text of article

references and notes

tables, figure captions and figures

2.4. At the end of the article is located a list of sources in Russian and English languages with transliteration.

2.5. When translating the manuscript into English with the assistance of an interpreter who is not a specialist in this area, it is recommended to edit the text with the assistance of a native speaker or Russian-speaking professional who use English language for a long time.

2.6. All articles undergo peer review by members of the editorial Board of the journal and/or invited experts. Received manuscripts will not be returned.

2.7. There is scientific and literary editing of manuscripts.

2.8. With each author whose article after peer review was accepted for publication it is signed a License Agreement (see sample form on website) the original of which in two copies the author should send by post to the editor. By submitting material to the journal, the author beforehand agrees with the rules of publication and the placement of their submitted materials in Open Access in accordance with License Creative Commons CC BY accepted by editorial Board.

2.9. There are no payments for the article. Free copies of journal for author are not provided.

  1. The stages of review process of submitted article

3.1. Moderation. The article is pre-reviewed and evaluated by the handling editor from the point of view of conformity to requirements and can be sent to the author for revision.

3.2. Peer-review. The article is sent for reviewing to the editorial Board members and/or external reviewers. The maximum peer-review period is 2 months.

The article is accepted or rejected based on the findings of reviewers and the chief editor acceptance. All submitted articles are checked for originality (plagiarism) using appropriate electronic resources. In the message about the results of the review of submitted article it is employed the following statements:

– article is peer-reviewed and accepted for publication

– article is peer-reviewed accepted subject to minor changes

– article is peer-reviewed accepted subject to resubmission with significant changes

– article is peer-reviewed and rejected.

The main reasons for rejection of manuscripts – the discrepancy between the scientific field of the journal; a significant proportion of borrowing and re-publication of author’s own results; the lack of scientific novelty. The Editor in Chief reserves the right to refuse any article, whether invited or otherwise, and to make suggestions and/or modifications before publication. The publisher shall furnish authors of accepted articles with proofs for the correction of printing errors. The proofs shall be returned within 14 calendar days of submittal. The publishers shall not be held responsible for errors which are the result of authors' oversights.

The editorial Board does not enter into correspondence with the authors as concerns the conclusion of the reviewers.

Requirements for abstracts and keywords

  1. Only manuscripts with abstract as concretized as possible will be accepted for publication. The abstract should include a rationale, description of methods, principal results and conclusions. Abstract should show the distinctive features and advantages of the article. Its purpose is to interest the reader and entice him to read the whole article. Due to the fact that of the abstract along with the bibliographic description of the article is also used independently as a metadata on the Internet, for databases, etc., it is important to avoid referencing a list of references of the article and author’s own, not generally accepted abbreviations.

Abstract can be built on the principle of IMRAD (Introduction, Methods, Results and Discussion):

Actuality (Introduction, Purpose) — relevance, goals and objectives of the study.

Methods — information on when, where, how the study was conducted; what methods were used and sources of information.

Results — key findings (specifics), the results of the study.

Discussion — information about how the result correlates with the findings of other scientists; what are the prospects for research directions for future work.

  1. Keywords — words which are used to search for articles in electronic databases — they should be concise and reflect the content and specific subject matter of the article. The number of keywords is 8-12. When forming keywords avoid words with abstract meaning or terms that can be used in other scientific disciplines.

REQUIREMENTS FOR FORMATTING OF THE MANUSCRIPT TEXT

  1. Text (including footnotes) should be typed in Times New Roman. Interval — 1,5 (one and a half); a full justification without hyphenation; indentation — 1.25 cm. At electronic data typing, use font size (font size): 14 — for the main text; 10 for footnotes and annotations.
  1. All illustrations, whether diagrams or photographs, are referred to as Figures. Figures should ideally be black and white, not colour, and numbered sequentially. Please prepare all figures, especially line diagrams, to the highest possible standards. Bear in mind that lettering may be reduced in size by a factor of 2 or 3, and that fine lines may disappear.
  1. Figures, tables and diagrams should be numbered indicating the name and, in an appropriate cases, of a source. They can be inserted in the text or specify the exact place of their location. They must be referenced in the text of the article in italics, for example: (Fig. 4), (table. 3).
  1. Drawings, graphs, charts and photos are submitted separately in jpg format with a minimum resolution of 250 dpi. It is possible to submit drawings in pdf format of good quality. It is not allowed to embed of figures in the text of the article.
  1. Scanned versions of illustrations, tables and formulas are not allowed.
  1. The text in the labels and legends in the drawings, diagrams, charts, and also headings and categories in the digital tables has to be executed in two languages — in Russian and in English. For example:

Рис. 1. Подпись

Fig. 1. Caption...

  1. Mathematical formulas should be written in WORD 2003 EQNEDT32.
  1. All abbreviations and acronyms should be defined at their first mention in the text.

References and Footnotes

References

Full reference should include all authors’ names and initials, date of publication, title of article, title of publication (italics), volume and issue number (of a journal), publisher and form (books, conference proceedings) and page numbers.

The author is responsible for the accuracy of all data, accuracy of citing and references to cited sources.

The list of references should contain at least 20 sources, including at least 8 in foreign languages. As the sources can be used:

articles from scientific journals (or electronic versions of printed scientific journals);

books;

monographs;

published conference proceedings;

patents.

These sources should:

to have a clear author’s attribution;

to be easy for detecting by means of search engines (Google, Yandex, Bing, etc.).

References should be arranged in the same order in which the sources mentioned in the text, not alphabetically (use Vancouver style http://mgsu.ru/science/N-Issled_i_innovac_deyat/UNP/naukometriya/Rekomendacii_po_podgotovke_statey_v_zhurnalah_MBD.pdf). It is imperative to ensure that all works cited in the text are included in the References section.

Indication in the References of the source to which no reference in the text exists is unacceptable.

In the reference list are not included:

– textbooks;

– article from any non-scientific journals and other printed media;

– regulations and legislation;

– statistical compilations and archives;

– electronic resources (electronic journals, online articles, newspaper and any other resources of news, reports and different research on websites, also websites of institutions and organizations);

– dictionaries, encyclopedias, other reference books;

– reports, records, notes, reports, protocols.

The list of literature (References) shall be in accordance with the requirements of GOST R 7.0.5-2008.

The list of literature in English (References) is compiled subject to the requirements of the international citation bases. For the transliteration is applied BSI system.

Important! In accordance with the international ethical rules of scientific publications recommended to the authors to observe the degree of self-citation no more than 10% (in the References).

Attention! Textbooks, theses and dissertations are not included in either the References nor in a footnotes!

Footnotes

Footnotes should be avoided, but any short, succinct notes making a specific point may be placed in number order following the alphabetical list of references.

Anonymous sources, including electronic and regulatory documents (decrees, laws, instructions, etc.) that cannot be indexed in databases are cited directly in the text or in the footnotes.

References to the sources used (articles, monographs, conference papers, books) are given in square brackets indicating the number of the source in the reference list and the page on which the citation was taken from, for example [1, p. 151].

The references to official documents, normative legal acts necessarily indicate the date, number, full name and official source of publication.

References to electronic resources are cited according to the rules set out in section 10 of GOST R 7.0.5-2008, with the obligatory indication of “URL” to indicate addresses and date of access.

 

Units of Measurement

Journal “Finance: Theory and Practice” follow the Système International (SI) for units of measurement. Imperial units will be converted, except where conversion would affect the meaning of a statement, or imply a greater or lesser degree of accuracy.

International Context

It should not be assumed that the reader is familiar with specific national institutions or corporations. Authors are encouraged to approach their chosen topic with an international perspective.

Countries and groupings of countries should be referred to by their full title (for example, “Europe” and “America” are ambiguous).

Special attention should be paid to identifying units of currency by nationality.

Acronyms should be translated in full into Russian and English.

Conference Articles

If your article is based on a conference article which may have been published elsewhere, it is important that you observe the following:

The submitted article must have been substantially revised, expanded and rewritten so that it is significantly different from the conference paper or presentation on which it is based. The article must be sufficiently different to make it a new, original work. As a guide, you should aim to have more than 50% new material. This is a matter of judgment and will be based on a comparison of the submitted article with the original conference paper.

The original conference article should be supplied by the author with the expanded article for the purpose of comparison.

All such articles will be subject to the same review process as any other submitted article.

Please include the statement “This article is a revised and expanded version of an article entitled [title] presented at [name, location and date of conference]” in the online system when you submit your article, using the “Notes for the Editor” field.

If the original conference article on which the extended article is based has been published elsewhere, or the copyright has been assigned to the conference organisers or another party, authors should ensure that they have cleared any necessary permissions with the copyright owners. Articles will not be accepted, post-review, for publication unless such written permissions have been provided along with author copyright forms.

EXAMPLES

KEYWORD REQUIREMENTS

Metadata (title/author details/abstract/keywords) is a vital part of any paper, since, in our online world, it is the metadata which is freely available to all users and which gets sent to many and varied online sources, from which users undertaking online searches will trace the paper. If you want your paper retrieved by the maximum number of people, the metadata is vital.

The Keywords field is essential in that this is the most frequently searched field if search results need to be narrowed, i.e. if the original search has produced too many records.

The title is a very concise indication of the content of a paper; the abstract is a more detailed – but still concise - description of that content; the keywords codify the key words and terms from the title and abstract (and text of the paper, if necessary).

Thus, the keywords should

  1. a) contain ALL the essential words/terms from the title and abstract and
  2. b) be in an optimum format, which is ideally of 1-3 words; if more than 1 word, the words should be a phrasenot a description (see below)

IF IN DOUBT, THINK

  1. a) WHAT IS THE PAPER ABOUT [IN TERMS OF KEY WORDS AND PHRASES]?
  2. b) WHAT WOULD I SEARCH FOR IF I WAS TRYING TO RETRIEVE A PAPER ON THIS TOPIC? 

Keyword Essentials

The following requirements are not intended to limit your freedom to choose keywords; they are intended to maximise the online retrieval of your article by putting your chosen keywords into the form most likely to be found when users search for topics.

  1. A) General
  2. The Keywords field should contain ALL the essential word/phrases in the title, e.g.
  3. a) If the title is “Semantic metrics”, then that phrase should also be used in the keywords field.
  4. b) Similarly, for the title

Market information feedback for the high-tech dominated IPO companies

the keywords should be:

market information; information feedback; high tech companies; IPO companies.”

Remember: users only get out what they put in, so the Keywords should also contain the phrase that IPO stands for (“initial public offering”) and also the full version of “high tech”, i.e. “high technology” – if only one is there, users searching using the other format will not find it.

  1. Similarly, the Keywords field should contain ALL the essential word/phrases in the abstract e.g. the key words/phrases in the following the abstract have been underlined:

“Improved interoperability between public organisations as well as between public and private organisations is of critical importance to make electronic government more successful. In this paper, stages of e-government interoperability is identified and discussed. Four stages are presented:

work process stage;

knowledge sharing stage;

value creation stage; strategy alignment stage.”

(N.B. both “e-government” and “electronic government” are used for the same reason outlined in 1b) above). See also B4, below

  1. Additional keywords from the full text can be added if the author(s) feel(s) they are relevant, but only if they add significantly to the likelihood of the paper being retrieved, i.e. if they are “key”.

(And if they are “key”, should they not appear somewhere in the abstract?)

  1. Where applicable, the title of the journal should also appear in the keywords (e.g. for International Journal of Nanotechnology, “nanotechnology” should appear in the keywords; for International Journal of Environment and Pollution, “environmental pollution” would be the phrase to use.

This is obviously more applicable to some journals rather than others. Commonsense should be used, but in general, journal titles should be included where possible.

  1. B) Specific
  2. ALL keywords should be in lower case (apart from abbreviations or proper names) and all keywords should preferably be separated by semi-colons and end with a full stop
  3. a) e.g.

balanced scorecard; performance measurement; performance improvement; SMEs; small and medium-sized enterprises; Malcolm Baldrige Criteria for Performance Excellence; MBCPE; knowledge management; KM; R&D; research and development; ebusiness; electronic business.

(All e-XXX terms should also be electronic XXX).

  1. Acronyms should be spelt out where it makes sense (which is usually if the acronym is 3 or more letters):
  2. a) e.g. DEA; data envelopment analysis; TQM; total quality management; DFA; design for assembly
  3. b) please note that the spelt-out forms of acronyms are in lower case unless they are proper names (e.g. in 1a) above - Malcolm Baldrige Criteria for Performance Excellence; MBCPE)
  4. c) Although use of “of” and “and” is discouraged (see 3 below) it is acceptable in the spelling out of acronyms:

e.g. ANOVA; analysis of variance; R&D; research and development; QoS; quality of service.

  1. d) Acronyms of two letters only are discouraged, since they will either be Stop Words (i.e. searches will retrieve nothing) or will be too common, i.e. have too many other meanings g. IS or IT for information systems or information technology will be stop words
  1. No brackets! Please do not use brackets; anything in brackets should be made into a separate keyword:

e.g. supply chain management (SCM) should be supply chain management; SCM.

  1. Although single keywords are acceptable, subject phrases are preferable; descriptive phrases should be avoidede.g.
  2. a) information; security may be better as information security, if that is what the article is about
  3. b) information systems and technology should be information systems; information technology; (for reasons outlined in A 1b) above)
  4. c) social needs with economic growth should be social needs; economic growth;
  5. d) reconstruction of terminology should be terminology reconstruction.
  6. e) investing in passive energy should be passive energy investment
  1. Normal phrases should not be hyphenated
  2. a) knowledge-management should be knowledge management; if in doubt, leave hyphen out
  1. If the article is all or mostly about a particular countryadd the country to the keywords (and spell out acronyms)
  2. a) UK; United Kingdom; United States; USA
  1. Spelling and terminology should preferably be British
  2. a) modelling not modeling; moulds not molds, behaviour not behavior, organisation not organization
  1. Plurals are preferred
  2. a) dispersion models rather than dispersion model

FORMATTING REFERENCES

    I.Book (monograph, collected works, etc.)

(Pay attention to italics, punctuation, lack thereof, spacing, uppercase and lowercase letters and transliteration in accordance with the BSI system)

  • Original edition in Russian (Russian authors):

The title is not transliterated, but translated into English and at the end specify (in Russian).

Dar’kin S.M. Pacific Russia: strategy, economy, security. Moscow: Delo Publ., 2007. 439 p. (In Russ.).

Ruban L.S., Kataeva E.G., Khegai V.K. Geostrategic interests of the Russian Federation in the Far East. Moscow: Nauka Publ., 2006. 408 p. (In Russ.).

  • Original edition in foreign language (foreign authors):

Copley P. Marketing Communications Management: Concepts and Theories, Cases and Practices. Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann, 2004. 441 p.

Potter E.H. Branding Canada. Projecting Canada’s Soft Power through Public Diplomacy. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2009. 464 p.

  • Edition in Russian, translated from the original edition in a foreign language (foreign authors; the name in brackets is given in the original spelling in the language of the source. Do not translate name from the name in the Russian language):

Haken H. [Erfolgsgeheimnis der Natur. Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann, 2004. 441 p.]. Rus. ed.: Sinergetika, Moscow: URSS Publ., 2015. 414 p.

    II. Article from printed scientific journal

(Pay attention to italics, punctuation, lack thereof, spacing, uppercase and lowercase letters and transliteration in accordance with the BSI system and existing doi)

  • Original article in Russian (Russian authors, Russian journals):

Not to do the transliteration of titles of articles; in italics is highlighted only the name of the journal.

The references always have to follow the same characters, and spaces between the data.

Kudrin A., Gurvich Ye. A new growth model for the Russian economy. Voprosy ekonomiki = Economic Issues, 2014, no. 2, pp. 4–36. (in Russian). Aganbegyan A.G. The economy from stagnation to recession. Den’gi i kredit = Money and Credit, 2016, no. 5, pp. 46–52. (In Russ.).

Buzyrev V.V., Dubrovskaya I.V. Implementation of the housing policy in Russia: perspectives and risks. Problemy sovremennoi ekonomiki = Problems of Modern Economics, 2014, no. 3, pp. 238–240. (In Russ.).

Vlasenkova E.A., Sadkov V.G. The necessity to form an integrated multilevel system of strategic planning in the Russian Federation. Ekonomika i predprinimatel'stvo = Economy and Entrepreneurship, 2014, no. 1-2, pp. 56–61. (In Russ.).

  • Original article in a foreign language (foreign authors, foreign journals):

Hirsch J.E. An Index to Quantify an Individual’s Scientific Research Output that Takes into Account the Effect of Multiple Co-authorship. Scientometrics, 2010, vol. 85, no. 3, pp. 741–754. doi: 10.1007/s11192-010-0193-9

Cross R., Fare R. Value Data and the Fisher Index. Theoretical Economics Letters, 2015, vol. 5, no. 2, pp. 262–267. doi: 10.4236/tel.2015.52031

  • Original article in a foreign language (Russian authors, foreign journals):

Andrienko Y., Guriev S. Determinants of Interregional Mobility in Russia. Economics of Transition, 2004, vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 1–27. doi: 10.1111/j.0967-0750.2004.00170.x

Bauche J.P., Grigoreva E.A., Matzakaris A. Human-Biometeorological Assessment of Urban Structures in Extreme Climate Conditions: The Example of Birobidzhan, Russian Far East. Advances in Meteorology, 2013, vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 1–20. doi: 10.1155/2013/749270

III. The materials of scientific conferences (symposia, round tables, seminars, etc.)

(Pay attention to the structure of the reference, italics, punctuation, lack thereof, spacing, uppercase and lowercase letters, transliteration in the BSI system, presence of doi and date of access)

  • The materials of foreign conferences etc.

Baklanov P.Ya., Romanov M.T. [A sea component of the geopolitical position of Pacific Russia]. Materialy mezhdunarodnoi konferentsii “Ustoichivoe prirodopol'zovanie v pribrezhno-morskikh zonakh” [Proc. Int. Sci. Conf. Sustainable Nature Management in the Coastal Zone]. Vladivostok: Dal'nauka Publ., 2013, pp. 26–28.

Zharikov V.V. [Training of innovation-oriented specialists]. Sovremennye tverdofaznye tekhnologii: teoriya, praktika i innovatsionnyi menedzhment: materialy V Mezhdunarodnoi nauchno-innovatsionnoi molodezhnoi konferentsii [Proc. 5th Int. Sci. Youth Conf. Contemporary Solid-Phase Technologies: Theory, Practice, and Innovative Management]. Tambov: TSTU Publ., 2013, pp. 286–291.

  • The materials of foreign conferences etc.

Wittek P., Rubio-Campillo X. Scalable Agent-based Modelling with Cloud HPC Resources for Social Simulations. Proc. 4th Int. Conf. on Cloud Computing Technology and Science (CloudCom), December 3–6, 2012. Taipei: IEEE, 2012, pp. 355–362.

Ginevičius R., Hogeforster M., Gedvilaitė D. The Formation of the System of Indicators of Development of the Country's Regions. Proc. 8th Int. Sci. Conf. Business and Management 2014, May 15–16. Lithuania, Vilnius: Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, 2014, pp. 503–510.

    IV. Article from the electronic scientific journal

(Pay attention to italics, punctuation, lack thereof, spacing, uppercase and lowercase letters, transliteration in the BSI system (if necessary), insertion (In Russ.), correct address of source URL and presence of doi)

  • The original article in Russian (Russian authors, Russian electronic journals):

Nikolaev V.G., Ganaga S.V. Possible Scales and Effect of Using Wind Power Stations for the Liquid Gas Production in Russia. Oil and Gas Business, 2011, no. 6, pp. 463–470. URL: http://ogbus.ru/authors/NikolaevVG/NikolaevVG_1.pdf, Accessed 20.07.2013. (In Russ.).

Mityakov S.N., Mityakov E.S. The Comparative Analysis of Approaches to Calculation of the Generalized Index of Economic Security of Russia. Sovremennye Problemy Nauki i Obrazovaniya, 2014, no. 3, pp. 307–313.: URL: http://www.science-education.ru/pdf/2014/3/20.pdf, Accessed 20.07.2013. (In Russ.).

Shepelev I.G., Markova Yu.A. Tourism and recreation clusters are a mechanism for innovative improvement of the system for strategic management of the region's development. Sovremennye Issledovaniya Sotsial'nykh Problem: Elektronnyi Nauchnyi Zhurnal, 2012, no. 3.: URL: http://sisp.nkras.ru/e-ru/issues/2012/3/markova.pdf, Accessed 20.07.2013. (In Russ.).

    V. Reference to the online source

(Pay attention to italics, punctuation, lack thereof, spacing, uppercase and lowercase letters, transliteration in the BSI system (if necessary), insertion (In Russ.), correct address of source URL, presence of doi and date of access)

Okrepilov V.V. The Role of the Economics of Quality in Strategic Planning. URL: http://2014.forumstrategov.ru/upload/documents/Okrepilov.pdf, Accessed 27.06.2015. (In Russ.).

The information framework for managing the competitiveness.URL: http://www.marketing.spb.ru/read/m19/index.htm, Accessed 21.11.1999. (In Russ.).

Promoting SMEs for Development: Promoting Entrepreneurship and Innovative SMEs in a Global Economy: Towards a More Responsible and Inclusive Globalisation. URL: http://www.oecd.org/cfe/smes/31919278.pdf, Accessed 21.11.1999. (In Russ.).

    VI. Reference to patent

(Pay attention to italics, punctuation, lack thereof, spacing, uppercase and lowercase letters, transliteration in the BSI system (if necessary), insertion (In Russ.))

Attention! If the author of the patent is not one — specify all authors.

Palkin M.V., Lavrenov A.N., Bol'shakov M.V., Kulakov A.V. The Way to Orient in Roll an Aircraft with Optical Homing Head. Patent RF, no. 2280590, 2006. (In Russ.).

 

Submission Preparation Checklist

As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.

  1. The manuscripts are accepted if has not been published or submitted for publication elsewhere.

  2. The materials should be prepared in a format OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, RTF, or World Perfect.

  3. Internet links are provided as a complete URL. 

  4. Text should be typed with an interval of one line spacing, font Times New Roman, 12 pt; to highlight the accents it is recommended to use italics rather than underlining (except Internet links). All images, graphics and tables are placed within the text according to the meaning of the particular part of text  (and not at the end of the document).

  5. Text should follow the stylistic and bibliography requirements as stated in  Regulations  located in the Part "About Us." 

  6. Please, remove the authors' names from the title of the article and other parts of the document to ensure the  anonymity of reviewing.

 

Copyright Notice

Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:

  1. Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.
  2. Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.
  3. Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work (See The Effect of Open Access).

 

Privacy Statement

Specified when registering the names and addresses will be used solely for technical purposes of a contact with the Author or reviewers (editors) when preparing the article for publication. Private data will not be shared with other individuals and organizations.