ARTICLE WITHDRAWAL POLICY

This is a common concept of scholarly communication that the editor of a learned journal is entirely and independently responsible for choosing which papers submitted to the journal will be published. The editorial board regulations for the journal serve as the editor’s guide and are restrained in making this choice by current laws governing libel, copyright infringement, and plagiarism. The significance of the academic archive as a permanent, historical record of the transactions of scholarship is a result of this idea. Published articles are required, as far as possible, to remain extant, precise, and unchanged. Conversely, rare conditions may lead to a withdrawal or even deletion of an article. Such actions should not be taken lightly and can only occur in uncommon conditions.
 
This policy has been arranged to deal with these issues and consider present best practices in the scientific community and libraries. We will review this issue as standards develop and alter, and we invite the opinions of the academic and library community. We are continuously engaging various information organisations to promote international standards and best practices that the publishing and information sectors may use since we believe these concerns call for them.
 
1. Article Withdrawal
 
This only applied to articles in the press, which are drafts of articles that occasionally contain errors or may have been sent twice unintentionally. The articles may occasionally, though less commonly, constitute violations of professional ethical standards, such as multiple submissions, false authorship claims, plagiarism, fraudulent data use, or similar actions. Articles in press (articles that have been accepted for publication but have not yet been officially published and will not yet have the full volume/issue/page information) that contain errors are found to be unintentional copies of already-published articles or are deemed by the editors to violate our journal's publishing ethics guidelines (such as multiple submission, false authorship claims, plagiarism, fraudulent use of data, or the like), maybe “Withdrawn” from Journal of Lisaniya Adabiya: Studies in Language and Literature Withdrawn refers to the removal of the article's HTML and PDF content in exchange of an HTML page and PDF which simply state that the article has been withdrawn by the Lisaniya Adabiya: Studies in Language and Literature Policy on Article in Press Withdrawal and include a link to the most recent version of the policy document.
 
2. Article Retraction
 
Infringements of the rules governing professional ethics, such as numerous submissions, false authorship claims, plagiarism, and the fraudulent use of data, etc. On rare occasions, a retraction will be used to fix submission or publication mistakes. It has long been a rare occurrence in the academic world for an article to be retracted by its authors or the editor on the advice of other scholars. Many scientific and library organisations have created standards for handling retractions, and Lisaniya Adabiya: Studies in Language and Literature has accepted the following best practices for retracting articles:
 
a. A retraction note titled "Retraction: [article title]" signed by the authors and/or the editor is published in the paginated section of the next issue of the journal and included in the contents list.
 
b. The electronic version contains a link to the source article.
 
c. In the online version, a screen displaying the retraction notice appears before the article. The link redirects to this page, from which the reader can access the article.
 
d. The authentic article has been kept exactly as is, except for a watermark on the .pdf stating on each page that it has been "RETRACTED."
 
e. The HTML version of the document is deleted.
 
The retraction process adheres to the Council on Publication Ethics (COPE) Retraction Guidelines, which can be found at https://publicationethics.org/files/retraction-guidelines-cope.pdf