Screening for Plagiarism

Screening for Plagiarism Manuscripts submitted to Culture, Art, and Tourism: Jurnal Budaya, Seni, dan Pariwisata will be screened using the Turnitin similarity detection tool. Culture, Art, and Tourism: Jurnal Budaya, Seni, dan Pariwisata will immediately reject papers leading to plagiarism or self-plagiarism.

Culture, Art, and Tourism: Jurnal Budaya, Seni, dan Pariwisata wants to ensure that all authors are careful and comply with international standards for academic integrity, particularly on the issue of plagiarism. Plagiarism occurs when an author takes ideas, information, or words from another source without proper credit to the source. Even when it occurs unintentionally, plagiarism is still a serious academic violation and unacceptable in international academic publications.

 

When the author learns specific information (a name, date, place, statistical number, or other detailed information) from a specific source, a citation is required. (This is only excused in cases of general knowledge, where the data is readily available in more than five sources or is common knowledge, e.g., the fact that Indonesia is an archipelagic country with diverse cultures.)

 

When the author takes an idea from another author, a citation is required even if the author then develops the idea further. This might be an idea about how to interpret the data, what methodology to use, or what conclusion to draw. Regardless of the idea, authors should cite their sources. In cases where the author develops the idea further, it is still necessary to cite the original source of the idea, and then in a subsequent sentence, the author can explain her or his more developed idea.

When the author takes words from another author, citation and quotation marks are required. Whenever four or more consecutive words are identical to a source that the author has read, the author must use quotation marks to denote the use of another author's original words; just a citation is no longer enough.