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dc.date.accessioned2021-01-25T07:53:04Z
dc.date.available2021-01-25T07:53:04Z
dc.identifier.urihttps://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/25842
dc.typepublisher
publisher.contactErnan Santiesteban Naranjo*
publisher.nameEditorial Tecnocientífica Americana*
publisher.emailesantiesteban2012@gmail.com*
publisher.addressStreet 613nw 15th in Amarillo, Texas, ZIP 79104, United States*
publisher.countryUnited States*
publisher.websitewww.etecam.com*
publisher.oabooks.exampleUrlhttp://www.etecam.com/index.php/etecam/article/view/22*
publisher.oalicenseCreative Commons Licenses Creative Commons is a non-profit organization founded by Lawrence Lessing, Professor of Law at Stanford University, which offers free licensing models that allow authors to deposit their work freely on the Internet, limiting the uses that can be made of such works. They are closely related to the Open Access movement and are included in institutional repositories so that authors can choose the conditions of access and protection of their work when depositing their documents. The Creative Commons licenses were created to share and reuse creative works under certain conditions. With the Creative Commons licenses, the author author authorizes the use of his/her work, but the work remains protected. As opposed to COPYRIGHT, which means "all rights reserved", the Creative Commons offers "some rights reserved". The four conditions of the Creative Commons licenses are: - Attribution: The author allows the work to be copied, reproduced, distributed, publicly communicated, made into a derivative work (translation, adaptation, etc.) and used commercially, as long as the original author is cited and acknowledged. - No derivative work: The author does not allow the creation of derivative works. - Non-commercial: The author does not allow commercial use. - Share alike: The author allows the copying, reproduction, distribution, public communication of the work, and generation of derived works, but under the same license. All the Creative Commons licenses require the recognition of the author of the work and, if the author wants, the source (for example, institution, publication or magazine) where it has been published must also be indicated. The Creative Commons licenses are free of charge and therefore the best way to ensure the remuneration of the author is to exclude commercial uses and derived works (i.e. the Attribution - Non-commercial - No Derivative Work license). These licenses are established in perpetuity, that is, for the entire duration of the protection of the work. The author reserves the right, at any time, to exploit the work under another license (whether Creative Commons or not), or even to withdraw it, but the previously granted license will continue in force. The Creative Commons licenses are not exclusive, therefore, the author can grant other licenses on the same work with different conditions, but the subsequent licenses can only be granted on a non-exclusive basis. The use of works with Creative Commons licenses obliges When a user decides to use a work with a Creative Commons license, he becomes a licensee and agrees to accept and respect the conditions of the license established by the author. In case of breach or infringement of a Creative Commons license, the author, as with any other work and license, will have to resort to the courts. In the case of direct infringement (by a user of the Creative Commons licence), the author can sue him/her both for infringement of intellectual property and for breach of contract (since the licence creates a direct link between the author and the user/licensee). The moral right of integrity, as stated in the Spanish legislation, is protected, even if it does not appear in the Creative Commons licenses. These licenses do not replace or reduce the rights that the law confers on the author; therefore, the author could sue a user who, under any Creative Commons license, had modified or mutilated his work causing damage to his reputation or interests. Of course, the decision as to when mutilation has occurred and when the mutilation harms the reputation or interests of the author would be left to each judge or court.*
publisher.peerreviewpolicyPeer review process The books will be subjected to an evaluation process by the double-blind system. Manuscripts with a negative opinion will be sent to a third reviewer, whose decision will be final. This process can take up to four months, so the authors are notified that once the time limit has expired without having reached a conclusion, they can withdraw the book, after notifying the publishers, and send it to another publisher. The works accepted under the condition of making minor changes, must be updated within a period not exceeding 30 days. The Editorial Tecnocientífica Americana adopts the following evaluation policy: 1.Receipt of the book. 2.Evaluation by the Editorial Board, according to the following criteria for preliminary evaluation. The book must: 3.a) Present an original contribution to the specific research field. 4.b) Be in line with the editorial line of the Editorial Tecnocientífica Americana: related to: - Administration Business Management, Organizations, Accounting - Agriculture, Livestock, Fisheries, Aquaculture - Arts, recreation and sports - Pure Science - Social Sciences - Natural Sciences - Computing, programming, computer science - Right. Laws. Jurisprudence - Economy - Medicine - Education - Philosophy - Psychology - Technology and Applied Sciences - Texts for primary school - Texts for secondary schools - University texts 1.c) Addressing the relationship between theory and practice. 2.d) To serve as a reference for other studies and research. 3.e) Obey the number of pages defined in the pattern of the journal (8 to 15), in single spacing. 4.e) Present language correction; 5.f) Attend to the rules for citations and bibliographical references, (g) Include an abstract not exceeding 250 words (in English and Spanish), among others. 3.Submission to peer reviewers (Members of the Editorial Committee and the International Reference Committee). 4.Analysis and confrontation of the opinions: 5.a) The books with favorable opinions are sent to the authors so that they can make the indicated corrections. 6.b) The books with a favorable and unfavorable opinion will be assigned to a third evaluator. 7.c) Books with two opposing opinions will be rejected. 8.d) The final acceptance and publication schedule of the article will only occur after the receipt of the reformulated text. 9.Final revision, final format and conversion to pdf and epub.*
publisher.authorinstructionsY*
publisher.authorinstructions.urlhttp://www.etecam.com/index.php/etecam/criterios_ed*
publisher.chargeauthorsN*
publisher.registerN*
publisher.status.activefalse
publisher.identifier1865*
publisher.phone007867769991*
publisher.descriptionThis publisher provides free access to its content, based on the principle of providing the public with free access to research, as this helps to increase global knowledge exchange. Open Access is a movement that promotes free and open access to scientific literature, encouraging its free availability on the Internet and allowing any user to read, download, copy, print, distribute or otherwise legally use it, without any financial, technical or other barriers. The only restriction on distribution and reproduction is to give the author control over the integrity of their work and the right to be properly acknowledged and cited. The main objective of open access is to increase the impact of research by increasing access to it What documents can we find in Open Access? articles doctoral theses congress communications learning objects photos and images audiovisual documents institutional documents heritage collections Paths to open access Green path: archiving or deposit of digital resources in institutional or thematic repositories and/or self-archiving when the deposit is made by the author himself (link to GREDOS self-archiving rules) Golden Route: Publication in open access magazines Both routes are complementary Open Access and Copyright In open access the author maintains control over his work. Intellectual property rights give you the power to decide how to disseminate your work, either in an open or restricted way. Open access is compatible with other types of dissemination, printed or electronic, free or paid. Incompatibility may occur when the works have been previously published and the copyright has been exclusively assigned to the publisher. In this case, making them available in Open Access requires the prior authorisation of the publishers.*


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