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BioScope: South Asian Screen Studies

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BioScope: South Asian Screen Studies is a blind peer-reviewed journal published twice in a year by Sage in association with University of Westminster and Sarai/Centre for the Study of Developing Societies . It is edited by Ravi S Vasudevan, Rosie Thomas, S V Srinivas, Debashree Mukherjee, Lotte Hoek and Salma Siddique

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6-520: This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). BioScope: South Asian Screen Studies is abstracted and indexed in: This article about a communication journal is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . See tips for writing articles about academic journals . Further suggestions might be found on the article's talk page . Committee on Publication Ethics The Committee on Publication Ethics ( COPE )

12-422: Is a nonprofit organization whose stated mission is to define best practice in the ethics of scholarly publishing and to assist editors and publishers to achieve this. COPE educates and support editors, publishers and those involved in publication ethics with the aim of moving the culture of publishing towards one where ethical practices become the norm, part of the publishing culture. COPE's approach

18-642: Is currently chaired by Dan Kulp. COPE is governed by the Trustee Board, who are ultimately responsible for the financial, legal and business operations of COPE as a charitable business and gives authority to Council and the Executive Officer and team to manage the day to day affairs of the organization. COPE also has links with the Council of Science Editors , the European Association of Science Editors ,

24-434: Is firmly in the direction of influencing through education, resources and support of COPE members. It also provides a forum for its members to discuss individual cases. COPE publishes a monthly newsletter and organises annual seminars. COPE has created an audit tool for members to measure compliance with its 'Core Practices' and guidance in the form of flowcharts, discussion documents, guidelines and eLearning modules. COPE

30-675: The Annual Report in 1999. On their basis, the first edition of Code of Conduct for Editors was published on the first COPE website in November 2004, with an Editorial in the BMJ.[5] The Code was replaced in 2017 with a simplified description of expectations as COPE's Core Practices, with links to COPE's detailed guidance. Previous COPE Chairs include: Michael Farthing , Fiona Godlee , Harvey Markovitch, Elizabeth Wager, Virginia Barbour , Chris Graf and Geraldine Pearson (co-Chairs), Deborah Poff . COPE

36-643: Was established in 1997 by a small group of medical journal editors in the United Kingdom . As of 2022, COPE has over 13,000 members worldwide, from all academic fields . Paid membership is open to editors of academic journals and others interested in publication ethics , and varies per year depending on the membership type. COPE's first guidelines were developed after discussion at the COPE meeting in April 1999 and were published as Guidelines on Good Publication Practice in

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