Copyright Notice
By submitting a manuscript to the journal, authors declare that:
-
They have been authorized by their co-authors to make this agreement.
-
The work described has not been formally published previously, except in the form of an abstract, lecture, review, thesis, or as part of a published overlay journal.
-
It is not under consideration for publication elsewhere.
-
Its publication has been approved by all authors as well as by the responsible authorities—explicitly or implicitly—at the institution where the work was carried out.
-
They have secured the rights to reproduce any material that has been previously published or copyrighted elsewhere.
-
They agree to the following copyright and licensing agreement.
Copyright
Authors who publish with Al Vadaukas: Journal of Education and Islamic Studies agree to the following terms:
-
Authors retain copyright and grant the journal the right of first publication, with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-SA 4.0), which allows others to share and adapt the work with proper acknowledgment of the original authorship and initial publication in this journal.
-
Authors may enter into separate, additional contractual agreements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal’s published version of the work (e.g., posting it to an institutional repository or publishing it in a book), with an acknowledgment of its initial publication in this journal.
-
Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their personal websites) prior to and during the submission process, as this can lead to productive exchanges and earlier and greater citation of the published work.
Open Data, Software Sharing, and Publication
This journal seeks to maximize reproducibility of the research it publishes. Authors are therefore required to share all data, code, or protocols underlying the findings reported in their articles. Exceptions are allowed but must be justified in a public written statement accompanying the article.
Datasets and software should be permanently stored and archived in appropriate trusted, open, or domain-specific repositories (see re3data.org and software repositories such as GitHub, GitLab, Bioinformatics.org, or similar platforms). Persistent identifiers (e.g., DOIs) for datasets must be included in the data/software resource section of the article. References to datasets and software must also be included in the article’s reference list with DOI links where available.
If a domain-specific data repository does not exist, authors should deposit their data in general-purpose repositories such as ZENODO, Dryad, Dataverse, or others.
Small datasets may also be published as supplementary files or data packages alongside the research article. However, use of repositories is strongly preferred in all cases.