Article Withdrawal
This policy applies only to Articles in Press, which are early versions of accepted manuscripts that may contain errors or have been accidentally submitted more than once. In some cases, though less frequently, these articles may also violate professional ethical standards, such as multiple submissions, false authorship claims, plagiarism, or fraudulent data use. If an Article in Press is found to contain significant errors, duplicate another published article, or breach the journal’s publication ethics guidelines, it may be withdrawn from Jurnal Review Politik. Withdrawal means that the article’s content (both HTML and PDF versions) will be removed and replaced with a notice stating that the article has been withdrawn in accordance with the Jurnal Review Politik Article in Press Withdrawal Policy, along with a link to the current policy document.

Article Retraction
Violations of professional ethical standards—such as multiple submissions, false authorship claims, plagiarism, fraudulent use of data, or similar misconduct—may lead to the retraction of an article. Retraction may also occasionally be used to correct significant errors in submission or publication. The withdrawal of an article by its authors or by the editor, following advice from members of the academic community, has long been a part of scholarly practice. Following best practices established by academic and library organizations, Jurnal Review Politik adopts the following procedures for article retraction: A retraction notice titled “Retraction: [article title]”, signed by the author(s) and/or the editor, will be published in a later issue of the journal and included in its table of contents. In the electronic version, a link will be provided to the original article. The online version of the article will display a retraction notice screen before accessing the article, indicating that it has been retracted. The original article will remain accessible but unchanged, except that a watermark stating “Retracted” will appear on each page of the PDF version. Meanwhile, the HTML version of the article will be removed.

Article Removal: Legal Limitations
In very rare circumstances, it may be necessary to remove an article from the online database. This action will only be taken if the article is clearly defamatory, violates the legal rights of others, is subject to (or is expected to be subject to) a court order, or contains content that, if applied, could pose a serious risk to health or safety. In such cases, the article’s metadata—such as the title and author(s)—will be retained, but the text will be replaced with a notice stating that the article has been removed for legal reasons.

Article Replacement
In situations where an article, if implemented, could pose a serious risk to health or safety, the authors of the original publication may choose to retract the flawed version and replace it with a corrected one. In such cases, the standard retraction procedures will be followed, except that the retraction notice in the database will include a link to the corrected and republished article, along with a record detailing the revision history of the document.