Ethical Standards
Państwo i Społeczeństwo / State and Society
Publication Ethics and Malpractice Statement
The journal is committed to maintaining high standards of publication ethics, editorial independence, peer-review integrity, transparency, reproducibility, and responsible scholarly communication.
Editorial integrity
Editorial decisions are based on scholarly merit, methodological quality, originality, and relevance to the journal’s scope.
Peer-review standards
Submitted manuscripts are handled confidentially and evaluated according to transparent editorial and review procedures.
Research ethics
The journal follows ethical standards concerning authorship, conflicts of interest, research integrity, corrections, and retractions.
Data and reproducibility
Authors are expected to report data availability and support transparency and reproducibility wherever legally and ethically possible.
Ethical Oversight ↑ Back to contents
The Editorial Team and the Publisher of Państwo i Społeczeństwo / State and Society have adopted and adhere to ethical principles consistent with the guidance of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). The journal follows COPE Core Practices and, in cases not described on this website, applies relevant COPE guidance and COPE Flowcharts.
This statement applies to all parties involved in the publication process, including authors, editors, reviewers, guest editors, members of the Editorial Board, the Publisher, and editorial staff.
The journal considers the following to be forms of publication misconduct: plagiarism, text recycling, duplicate or simultaneous submission, redundant publication, data fabrication or falsification, image manipulation, citation manipulation, peer-review manipulation, undisclosed conflicts of interest, ghost authorship, guest authorship, gift authorship, authorship manipulation, unethical research practices, breaches of confidentiality, and misuse of generative artificial intelligence tools.
Any suspected case of unethical conduct will be considered individually and thoroughly. Depending on the nature and severity of the case, the Editorial Team may request explanations or additional documentation from the authors, contact reviewers, consult members of the Editorial Board or external experts, contact the authors’ institution, publish a correction, publish an expression of concern, retract the article, or take other appropriate action in accordance with COPE guidance.
Authors, readers, reviewers, and other parties may report suspected publication misconduct, research misconduct, errors, or ethical concerns to the Editorial Office. Reports will be handled confidentially, fairly, and without retaliatory measures against persons who raise concerns in good faith.
Direct marketing activities, including the solicitation of manuscripts, are conducted appropriately, unobtrusively, and in a well-targeted manner. The journal ensures that all information provided about its scope, metrics, editorial policies, fees, and publication processes is truthful and not misleading.
Research Ethics, Human Participants and Consent ↑ Back to contents
Research involving human participants, human biological material, personal data, sensitive information, patients, minors, vulnerable groups, or identifiable individuals must be conducted in accordance with applicable legal and ethical standards. Where required, authors must obtain approval from an appropriate ethics committee, institutional review board, or other authorized body before conducting the study.
Authors must state in the manuscript whether ethical approval was obtained, waived, or not required. Where applicable, the statement should include the name of the approving body, approval number, and date of approval. If ethical approval was not required, authors should briefly explain the reason.
Studies involving human participants should include information on informed consent. Authors are responsible for ensuring that participants’ privacy, anonymity, dignity, rights, safety, and confidentiality are protected. Identifiable personal data, images, case details, quotations, or contextual information may be published only when appropriate consent has been obtained or when the material has been sufficiently anonymized.
Case studies, case reports, and manuscripts containing potentially identifiable information must be prepared with particular care. Authors must remove unnecessary identifying details and obtain consent for publication where individuals may be identifiable from the text, images, tables, quotations, or contextual information.
Where research involves animals, biological material, environmental samples, clinical data, or other regulated material, authors must comply with applicable legal, institutional, and ethical requirements and provide appropriate declarations in the manuscript.
The Editorial Team may request additional documentation confirming ethical approval, consent, permissions, or compliance with applicable ethical standards. Manuscripts that fail to meet applicable ethical requirements may be rejected. If ethical concerns are identified after publication, the Editorial Team will investigate the matter in accordance with COPE guidance and may publish a correction, expression of concern, or retraction, as appropriate.
Data Sharing and Reproducibility ↑ Back to contents
Państwo i Społeczeństwo / State and Society supports transparency, responsible data sharing, and reproducibility of research. Authors should present methods, materials, data sources, analytical procedures, and references in sufficient detail to allow the research to be assessed and, where possible, reproduced or verified.
All submitted manuscripts must include a Data Availability Statement indicating whether and how the data, materials, code, or other resources supporting the findings can be accessed. Where legal, ethical, contractual, or privacy restrictions apply, authors should clearly state the nature of the restriction.
Authors are encouraged to deposit research data, supplementary materials, analytical code, and protocols in recognized repositories whenever legally, ethically, and practically possible. Data sharing must respect privacy, confidentiality, intellectual property rights, informed consent, and applicable data protection regulations.
Detailed policy: the journal’s full requirements are described in the Data Sharing and Reproducibility Policy.
The Editorial Team may request access to underlying data, materials, code, documentation, or ethics approvals when this is necessary to assess the manuscript or investigate post-publication concerns. Failure to provide requested information may result in rejection, correction, expression of concern, or retraction, depending on the circumstances.
Rules for Readers ↑ Back to contents
- The journal is published in Open Access. Content is available free of charge to individual readers and institutions.
- Access to content does not require logging in.
- All texts from the journal are published under the Creative Commons CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license, which means that works may be copied and distributed in any medium and format, provided that:
- the author’s name and surname are credited;
- the content is not used for financial gain or monetary compensation;
- modified content is not distributed, including adaptations or remixes.
- The Editors invite Readers to discuss published content. The Editors may publish polemical articles, debates, or responses in the journal, where appropriate.
- The Editorial Office encourages Readers to report any suspected instances of scientific or publication misconduct, particularly ghost authorship, guest authorship, plagiarism, data falsification, data manipulation, incorrect or negligent research procedures, citation manipulation, or violations of ethical principles in science.
- Reports of suspected misconduct will be reviewed and considered by the Editor-in-Chief, who may review the evidence, contact the Author, consult the Editorial Board or other appropriate experts, publish a correction, expression of concern or retraction, inform appropriate authorities or institutions where justified, and record and archive the case.
Contact: comments on articles and concerns regarding scientific or publication misconduct should be addressed to the Managing Editor at ppitala@uafm.edu.pl.
Rules for Editors ↑ Back to contents
- The Editorial Team ensures the quality, regularity of publication, and accessibility of the journal. It is guided by scientific integrity, transparency, impartiality, and the aim of raising scientific, editorial, and ethical standards.
- The Editorial Team ensures compliance with publication ethics and counteracts plagiarism, abuse, misconduct, ghost authorship, guest authorship, citation manipulation, and other unfair practices.
- The Editorial Team evaluates submitted materials according to an established and transparent procedure and decides which manuscripts will be published, taking into account the opinions of external reviewers appointed for this purpose.
- Editorial decisions are based on the originality of the submitted material, its scientific value, methodological quality, relevance to the journal’s scope, and importance for the development of research in Poland and internationally.
- Commercial considerations do not influence editorial decisions.
- The Editorial Team treats received manuscripts as confidential and does not disclose information about submitted articles to unauthorized persons.
- Editors must not use unpublished manuscripts, data, arguments, or interpretations without the written consent of the authors.
- Editors who have a conflict of interest in relation to a submitted manuscript are excluded from handling the manuscript and from participating in the editorial decision.
- The Editor-in-Chief has final responsibility for editorial decisions and for maintaining the integrity of the scholarly record.
- The Editorial Team has the right to publish corrections, expressions of concern, or retractions if evidence emerges indicating unreliability or falsification of research, major methodological errors, plagiarism, redundant publication, unethical research, data unavailability affecting verification, peer-review manipulation, or other serious violations of publication ethics.
- The Editorial Team prevents and manages conflicts of interest in accordance with the journal’s Conflict of Interest Policy.
Rules for Reviewers ↑ Back to contents
- Reviewers are obligated to evaluate submitted manuscripts objectively, fairly, constructively, and within the scope of their expertise.
- Reviewers are obligated to decline a review invitation if they suspect a conflict of interest, lack of competence in the subject matter, or inability to complete the review within the specified deadline.
- Reviewers should report any significant similarity between the reviewed manuscript and other works known to them.
- Reviewers should indicate significant works related to the subject of the manuscript that have not been cited by the author, where relevant.
- Reviewers must not use the reviewed manuscript, data, arguments, or interpretations for their own personal, professional, or scientific benefit.
- Reviewers are obligated to submit the review using the journal’s review form within the specified deadline.
- The review should conclude with a clear recommendation regarding rejection, acceptance without corrections, minor revision, major revision, or another decision available in the journal’s editorial workflow.
- Reviewed manuscripts are confidential documents and must not be disclosed to unauthorized persons.
- The content of the review is not publicly disclosed.
- Reviewers must not suggest adding citations to their own works or to the works of colleagues unless such citations are scientifically justified and directly relevant to the manuscript.
- The author receives reviews in an anonymous form. Direct interaction between the author and the reviewer is prohibited.
- Reviewers must not use generative AI tools in the review process.
Text Recycling / Self-plagiarism ↑ Back to contents
Text recycling, also known as self-plagiarism, occurs when sections of the same or substantially similar text appear in more than one of an author’s own publications without proper disclosure, justification, or citation.
The editors of Państwo i Społeczeństwo / State and Society will consider each case of text recycling on an individual basis, both in submitted manuscripts and in published articles. The decision will depend on the degree, location, and nature of the overlap.
Limited overlap may be acceptable in some cases, for example in the description of previously used methods, provided that the original source is properly cited. However, undisclosed overlap, excessive overlap, or overlap in the results, discussion, or conclusions is unacceptable.
Where overlap is considered minor, authors may be asked to rewrite overlapping sections and cite their previous article or articles. More significant overlap may result in rejection of the manuscript.
If text recycling is discovered in a published article, the Editorial Team may publish a correction, publish an expression of concern, or retract the article, depending on the severity and consequences of the overlap.
Conflict of Interest Policy ↑ Back to contents
Rules for Editors
If a manuscript is submitted by a member of the Editorial Office, Editorial Board, Scientific Advisory Board, publisher’s staff, or another person involved in the journal, the Editorial Office makes every effort to maintain impartiality in the editorial and review processes.
Such manuscripts are handled by another uninvolved editor whenever possible, and the submitter is excluded from the review process and from the decision-making process related to the manuscript.
Members of the Editorial Board may serve as reviewers when their expertise matches the subject of a submitted manuscript. Editorial Board members are excluded from reviewing manuscripts where a conflict of interest exists, including their own submissions, submissions from their institution, recent collaborators, students, or other situations that may compromise impartiality.
Editorial Board members involved in a submission have no role in the editorial decision-making process for that manuscript.
Rules for Reviewers
A double-blind peer-review model is used, in which reviewers and authors do not know each other’s identities. At least two independent reviewers are assigned to each manuscript. Manuscripts are submitted to reviewers in anonymized form, without the authors’ personal data.
If the content of the manuscript itself allows the author to be identified, for example in the case of a very narrow or specialized topic, the reviewer must notify the Editor-in-Chief and either confirm the absence of a conflict of interest or decline to prepare the review.
Examples of situations in which a conflict of interest may arise between the reviewer and the author include direct personal or family relationships, professional authority or subordination, scientific rivalry, direct professional or scientific collaboration within the two years preceding the year in which the manuscript was prepared, current employment at the same institution, current or recent supervision, mentoring, or student-supervisor relationship, and financial or non-financial interests that may compromise impartiality.
Complaints and Appeals ↑ Back to contents
Complaints and appeals may be submitted to the Editor-in-Chief at pkowalczewski@uafm.edu.pl. Concerns may also be submitted to the Managing Editor at ppitala@uafm.edu.pl.
In the event of complaints, grievances, or appeals, particularly those concerning a breach of impartiality, procedural irregularities, editorial conduct, peer-review quality, or publication ethics, the Editorial Office registers and archives the complaint or appeal, requests a detailed description of the matter and relevant documentation where necessary, maintains confidentiality, and responds in writing within 30 days of receipt where possible.
Appeals against editorial decisions must provide a clear justification and, where relevant, identify specific errors in the review or editorial process. Appeals are considered by the Editor-in-Chief or another uninvolved editor. The submission of an appeal does not guarantee a change of editorial decision.
Intellectual Property ↑ Back to contents
The Author submitting a manuscript for publication declares that the article is the result of the Author’s independent, original creative work and has been prepared with respect for all third-party rights, including property copyrights, moral rights, personal rights, privacy rights, and other legally protected interests.
If the manuscript contains works not created by the Author, such as photographs, illustrations, drawings, tables, figures, charts, or other materials, the Author is responsible for obtaining all necessary permissions for their use, reproduction, and distribution in the article.
Authors are obliged to indicate all publications, data sources, archival materials, legal acts, reports, websites, and other sources used in the preparation of the manuscript. When citing data, words, ideas, or other materials created by others, authors must use appropriate citation practices, including quotation marks and references where required.
Special Issues and Guest Editors ↑ Back to contents
If the journal publishes special issues or thematic sections involving guest editors, all submissions are subject to the same editorial standards, ethical policies, plagiarism screening, and external peer-review procedures as regular submissions.
The Editor-in-Chief remains responsible for the academic integrity and editorial oversight of the journal, including special issues and thematic sections.
Guest editors may not make final acceptance decisions on their own submissions or on manuscripts where a conflict of interest exists. Such submissions are handled independently by the Editor-in-Chief or another uninvolved editor.
AI Policy ↑ Back to contents
The Editorial Board of Państwo i Społeczeństwo / State and Society recognizes both the rapid development of artificial intelligence tools and their usefulness when used responsibly, as well as the risks and threats associated with them, including unreliable content generation, fabricated citations, breaches of confidentiality, plagiarism, authorship misrepresentation, and lack of accountability.
AI Tools: Assistive and Generative
Assistive Tools (Assistive AI). Assistive AI tools suggest, correct, or enhance human-generated content, for example by flagging spelling, grammar, punctuation, or typographical errors, or by supporting language editing. Human-generated content enhanced with these tools is considered AI-assisted.
Generative Tools (Generative AI). Generative AI tools, such as ChatGPT, Copilot, DALL·E, or similar systems, generate content in the form of text, images, translations, summaries, analyses, code, or other outputs. Such content, even if subsequently modified by a human, may be considered AI-generated content.
Translation Policy
- The journal does not accept manuscripts that are machine-translated without substantial human revision, verification, and responsibility.
- Machine translation or computer-assisted translation tools may be used only as support, provided that the final version is fully reviewed, corrected, and approved by a human author or translator.
- Only a human translator may be credited as the author of a translation and is responsible for the quality, accuracy, and adequacy of the translation.
- Submissions of articles translated from the original language into another language must include information about the author of the translation.
- Information about the author of the translation may be included in the published article, where appropriate.
- If the author of the translation is also the author of the article, this must be clearly stated in the submission.
- Each translation must be reviewed and verified by a human to avoid errors resulting from misunderstanding the context, terminology, authorial intention, cultural meaning, or specific nature of the original language.
Rules regarding the use of AI tools by journal editors
- Editors do not use generative AI tools to make editorial decisions or to replace human evaluation in the publishing process.
- All submitted manuscripts are evaluated at every stage by humans, and editorial decisions remain the responsibility of the editors.
- Editors must not upload submitted manuscripts, reviews, correspondence, unpublished data, or confidential editorial information to generative AI tools.
- The journal uses the iThenticate anti-plagiarism system with AI-generated content detection. Each report is evaluated and verified by a human.
Rules regarding the use of AI tools by reviewers
- Only human reviewers may author reviews.
- The use of AI tools to generate reviews is prohibited.
- Reviewing a scientific article involves a responsibility that can only be attributed to a human.
- Reviewers must not upload reviewed manuscripts, manuscript fragments, unpublished data, review forms, or confidential information to generative AI tools.
- Reviewers are fully responsible for the content, fairness, accuracy, and confidentiality of the review.
Confidentiality ↑ Back to contents
- Submitted manuscripts are treated as confidential documents.
- Editors, reviewers, and editorial staff must maintain the confidentiality of the review process.
- Information about submitted manuscripts, reviews, editorial correspondence, reviewer identities, editorial deliberations, and unpublished materials may not be disclosed to unauthorized persons.
- Editors and reviewers may not submit manuscripts, manuscript fragments, reviews, data, or confidential information to generative AI tools such as ChatGPT, Copilot, or similar systems, as this may violate confidentiality, copyright, data protection, and publication ethics.
- Confidentiality obligations continue after the editorial or review process has been completed.
Anti-plagiarism Checking ↑ Back to contents
All articles intended for publication in the journal are scanned for potential plagiarism using the iThenticate / Crossref Similarity Check anti-plagiarism system. There are no fixed percentage thresholds for plagiarism. Each report from the system is individually analyzed and assessed by the Editors.
Any borrowing from another publication must be accompanied by an appropriate reference. Similarity reports are interpreted in context, taking into account the nature of the overlap, cited sources, quotations, methodology descriptions, reference lists, and other relevant elements.
Where the report or editorial assessment indicates possible plagiarism, text recycling, redundant publication, citation manipulation, or another form of publication misconduct, the Editorial Team may request explanations from the authors, ask for corrections, reject the manuscript, or take post-publication action in accordance with COPE guidance.
Post-publication Discussions, Corrections, Expressions of Concern and Retractions ↑ Back to contents
The Editors of Państwo i Społeczeństwo / State and Society encourage post-publication discussion, scholarly debate, and the reporting of potential errors, ethical concerns, or concerns regarding the reliability of published content. Post-publication concerns may be reported by authors, readers, reviewers, editors, institutions, or other parties.
The journal follows COPE guidance when handling post-publication corrections, allegations of misconduct, expressions of concern, retractions, and other updates to the scholarly record. Each case is assessed individually, fairly, and on the basis of available evidence.
The Editors will consider publishing a correction if an error affects the accuracy, clarity, interpretation, funding information, authorship information, acknowledgements, references, metadata, or other elements of the article but does not invalidate the main findings or conclusions.
The Editors may consider publishing an expression of concern if serious concerns arise regarding the integrity, ethics, or reliability of the article, but the available evidence is inconclusive, an investigation is ongoing, the authors’ institution has not yet completed its assessment, or the authors’ explanations are insufficient at the time of assessment.
The Editors will consider retracting a publication if there is clear evidence that the findings are unreliable, the article constitutes plagiarism, the findings have previously been published elsewhere without proper attribution, the article is a case of redundant publication, it contains unauthorized copyrighted material or data, copyright has been infringed, it reports unethical research, underlying data or documentation necessary for verification cannot be provided where required, it was created using generative artificial intelligence tools in a manner inconsistent with the journal’s AI policy, the Author or Authors failed to disclose a major conflict of interest, or there is evidence of peer-review manipulation, authorship manipulation, citation manipulation, or another serious breach of publication ethics.
Corrections, expressions of concern, and retractions are published as clearly identifiable notices and linked to the original article wherever technically possible. Retracted articles remain available on the journal website to preserve the scholarly record, but they are clearly marked as retracted and linked to the retraction notice. The final decision to publish a correction, expression of concern, or retraction rests with the Editor-in-Chief.
Vol. 26 (2026)
Published: 2026-01-01
eISSN: 2451-0858
10.31749/2451-0858-SaS
English
Język polski