CWR Journal
Editorial Policy
The journal Editors treat submitted manuscripts and all communications with the
authors as confidential between themselves and the peer-reviewers (who also undertake
to keep these matters confidential). Similarly, authors must treat communication
with the journal as confidential: correspondence with the journal, reviewers’ reports
and other confidential material must not be posted on a website or otherwise publicized
without prior permission from the Editors, whether or not the submission is eventually
published.
Peer Review
All contributions are sent to an Associate Editor who will select two or more independent
reviewers to consider the article. Authors are welcome to suggest suitable or unsuitable
independent reviewers, but these suggestions may not be followed. The journal sympathetically
considers exclusion requests and usually honours them, but the Editor’s decision
on the choice of peer-reviewers is final.
Authorship Policy
Submission to the CWRJ is taken to mean that all the listed authors have agreed
to the contents. The corresponding (submitting) author is responsible for having
ensured that this agreement has been reached, and for managing all communication
between the journal and all co-authors. Any changes to the author list after submission,
such as a change in the order of the authors, or the deletion or addition of authors,
requires the signed consent of every author. Authors are strongly encouraged to
include a statement in the acknowledgements to specify the actual contribution of
each co-author to the completed work.
Policy on Duplicate Publication
Manuscripts submitted for publication must be accompanied by a statement that they
have not been published in a refereed journal or proceedings, or submitted for possible
publication elsewhere.
Authors submitting a contribution who have related material under consideration
or in press elsewhere should provide the Editors with a clearly marked copy at the
time of submission, and draw the Editors’ attention to it in their cover letter.
Authors must disclose any such information while their contributions are under consideration
- for example, if they submit a related manuscript elsewhere that was not written
at the time of the original journal submission.
Competing Financial Interest Policy
In the interests of transparency and to help readers to form their own judgment
of potential bias, we require authors to declare any competing financial interests
in relation to the work described. A form will be sent to the author to complete
and sign before publication of the article. A shortened form of the declaration
is published as part of the acknowledgements of the article. Authors may use the
form to decline to disclose their financial interests, but the journal will publish
the fact that they have declined to provide this information.
Definition
For the purposes of this statement, competing interests are defined as those of
a financial nature that, through their potential influence on behaviour or content
or from perception of such potential influences, could undermine the objectivity,
integrity or perceived value of a publication. They can include any of the following:
- Funding: Research support (including salaries, equipment, supplies, reimbursement
for attending symposia, and other expenses) by organizations that may gain or lose
financially through this publication.
- Employment: Recent (while engaged in the research project), present or anticipated
employment by any organization that may gain or lose financially through this publication.
- Personal financial interests: Stocks or shares in companies that may gain
or lose financially through publication; consultation fees or other forms of remuneration
from organizations that may gain or lose financially; patents or patent applications
whose value may be affected by publication.
It is difficult to specify a threshold at which a financial interest becomes significant,
but we offer as one possible practical guideline: “Any undeclared competing financial
interests that could embarrass you were they to become publicly known after your
work was published.”
Application to Authors
Unless/until the article is published, authors’ declarations will be considered
confidential, and will not be disclosed to peer-reviewers.
The published article indicates the authors’ response using one of the following
standard wordings:
- The authors declare competing financial interests.
- The authors declare no competing financial interests.
- The authors decline to provide information about competing financial interests.
For publications with more than one author, the corresponding author should provide
a declaration on behalf of all authors.
We recognize that some authors may be bound by confidentiality agreements. In such
cases the authors may use the following standard wording as an alternative to itemized
disclosure: “The authors declare that they are bound by confidentiality agreements
that prevent them from disclosing their financial interests in this work.” We do
not require authors to state the monetary value of their financial interests.
Application to Referees
We invite peer-reviewers to exclude themselves in cases where there is a significant
conflict of interest, financial or otherwise. However, just as financial interests
need not invalidate the conclusions of an article, nor do they automatically disqualify
an individual from evaluating it. We ask peer-reviewers to inform the Editors of
any related interests, including financial interests as defined above, that might
be perceived as relevant. Editors will consider these statements when weighing reviewers’
recommendations.
Application to Editors
The Editors are required to declare to the Board of CWRA any interests—financial
or otherwise - that might influence, or be perceived to influence, their editorial
practices.
Application to Publishing Policy
Journals depend upon their independence. The strict policy is that editorial independence,
decisions and content should not be compromised by commercial or financial interests,
or by any specific arrangements with advertising clients or sponsors. Our policy
is to disclose such arrangements where there is any risk of a perception of compromise.