Borrowing and plagiarism

The editors check the article for borrowed text using the anti-plagiarism system, access to which is provided by the university subscription.
The degree of originality of the article must be at least 70%.
Articles containing more than 30% of borrowed text are not allowed for consideration. In case of repeated failure to comply with the requirement for borrowed text, the article will not be accepted.
When citing, it is advisable to use borrowed fragments consisting of no more than 5 consecutively borrowed words; no more than 50% of such fragments are allowed per document. In case of direct citation (no more than 10 words) and paraphrase, references to the source are required.
Self-citation should not exceed 3 (three) references to your works in one article.
If the authors used works, articles, provisions, or quotes and statements of other researchers when writing an article, they must necessarily refer to the works of these scientists and correctly format the cited text in accordance with the requirements specified in the appendix. Plagiarism is an unethical act that violates the principles of the AlmaU Code of Ethics for Scientific Research1.
If a demonstrable fact(s) of violation of the principles and standards of ethical research of AlmaU is discovered in an article published in a journal, the editorial board undertakes to withdraw this article from the issue in which it was published and from the journal's website (retract the article) with mandatory indication of specific violations of the principles and standards of the Code by the author(s) and place a corresponding announcement in the next issue of the journal.
The author(s) of the article in which a demonstrable fact of violation of the principles and standards of ethical research of AlmaU is discovered are not allowed to submit articles to scientific publications of AlmaU for two years from the date of discovery of the fact(s) of violation.