Plagiarism Policy
Plagiarism is the unethical act of copying someone else’s initial ideas, processes, results or words without explicit acknowledgment of the original author and source. Self-plagiarism occurs when an author utilizes a large part of his/her own previously published work without appropriate references. It can range from getting the same manuscript published in multiple journals to modifying a previously published manuscript with new data.
Types of Plagiarism
Full Plagiarism: Previously published content without changes to the text, idea and grammar is considered full plagiarism. It involves presenting exact text from a source as one’s own.
Partial Plagiarism: If the content is a mixture of multiple sources, where the author has extensively rephrased text, it is known as partial plagiarism.
Self-Plagiarism: If the author reuses complete or portions of their pre-published research, it is known as self-plagiarism. Complete self-plagiarism is a case when an author republishes their own previously published work in a new journal.
Please Note:
The editor will run a plagiarism check using Turnitin for the submitted articles before sending them to the reviewers. We do not process any plagiarised content. If an article has over 25% plagiarism based on the check result, the article will be rejected.
Turnitin check results:
Evangelikal 5(1): 2021 Evangelikal 5(2): 2021
Evangelikal 6(1): 2022 Evangelikal 6(2): 2022
Evangelikal 7(1): 2023 Evangelikal 7(2): 2023
Evangelikal 8(1): 2024 Evangelikal 8(2): 2024
Evangelikal 9(1): 2025 Evangelikal 9(2): 2025