Ethics & Disclosures

The Markets & Society journal is published by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University and is a project of Mercatus’ F. A. Hayek Program for Advanced Study in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics. The journal is committed to maintaining the highest level of integrity in the content published. The journal has a conflict-of-interest policy in place and follows standards for investigating and dealing with misconduct (established by the Committee on Publications and Ethics).

We commit to the following:

  • The journal is open-access and subscribes to the terms and conditions of Creative Commons. Authors will retain full copyright of their material and are encouraged to disseminate widely.

  • Content published in this journal is single-blind peer-reviewed.

  • The journal will not charge for submissions. Published authors will get a free printed copy of the issue in which their article appears.

Authors should refrain from misrepresenting research results which could damage the trust in the journal, the professionalism of scientific authorship, and ultimately the entire scientific endeavor.

We expect authors to commit to the following:

  • The manuscript should not be submitted to more than one journal for simultaneous consideration.

  • The submitted work should be original and should not have been published elsewhere in any form or language (partially or in full) unless the new work concerns an expansion of previous work.

  • Results should be presented clearly, honestly, and without fabrication, falsification, or inappropriate data manipulation (including image-based manipulation). Authors should adhere to discipline-specific rules for acquiring, selecting, and processing data.

  • All data and materials as well as software applications or custom code support their published claims and comply with field standards.

No data, text, or theories by others should be presented as if they were the author’s own. Proper acknowledgements to other works must be given (this includes material that is closely copied (near verbatim), summarized and/or paraphrased), quotation marks (to indicate words taken from another source) are used for verbatim copying of material, and permissions secured for material that is copyrighted.