Copyright Claims
Any claims of copyright infringement should be addressed to the Editor at editor@IJEASM.com with the subject line “Copyright Infringement”.
The claim must be sufficed by documented files supporting the same version as being published or copyrighted by the other party before the date of publication of the concerned IJEASM article. On receipt of the claim, the IJEASM Editorial Board, if found satisfactory, will inform the IJEASM author to provide an explanation; the discussion of which will be transparent to both parties.
The IJEASM Board reserves the sole rights to decide the validity of any such claims. After deliberation, if the claim is found justified, the concerned manuscript will be removed from all IJEASM archives and servers. Any subsequent print copies of the concerned issue will not contain the article. In case, the changes required are minimal such as inclusion of references, the authors will be intimated to do the required amendments according to the IJEASM article correction policies. The alternative version shall undergo peer-review as any other general submission and shall be published in the same issue (number) of the concerned volume.
Any claims on copyright will be addressed with the highest priority. A revert mail will be dispatched within 3 working days provided the claim is supported with documented evidence.
Licensing
IJEASM recommends the use of Creative Commons licenses to inform readers how published content can be used. We do not specify which license should be used. You may select the Creative Commons license that best meets the needs of the journal, or give authors the option to choose a license for their paper.
You may not add to or adapt the terms of a Creative Commons license. This means you cannot impose restrictions on authors or users that conflict with the provisions of the license. Creative Commons licenses state clearly that "For the avoidance of doubt, where Exceptions and Limitations apply to Your use, this Public License does not apply".
In some cases, we will accept a publisher's own license if it is broadly equivalent to one of the Creative Commons licenses.