About the Journal
The European International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research (EIJMR) (ISSN: 3050-7227) is a prestigious, peer-reviewed journal based in the Netherlands, published on the AVATPublisher platform. It promotes high-quality research across diverse fields, including social sciences, engineering, medical sciences, humanities, business, and technology. With a rigorous peer-review process, EIJMR ensures the publication of impactful and reliable studies. As an open-access journal, it fosters global knowledge dissemination, making research widely accessible. Leveraging AVATPublisher’s advanced publishing technology, EIJMR enhances academic visibility and collaboration, solidifying its reputation as a leading multidisciplinary research journal.
This is a Open Access journal which means that all content is freely available without charge to the user or his/her institution. Users are allowed to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of the articles, or use them for any other lawful purpose, after obtaining prior permission from the AVAT Publisher . This is in accordance with the BOAI definition of open access.
Ethical Guidelines for Authors
1. European International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research (EIJMR) does not allow dual publication (the same material published twice in the peer-reviewed literature) for the sake of being reproducible-date, or dual submission (the same material simultaneously submitted to more than one journal).
2. European International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research (EIJMR) does not tolerate plagiarism, data or figure manipulation, knowingly providing incorrect information, inaccurate author attributions, failures to declare conflicts of interest and fraud. This list is not well-rounded - if there is uncertainty of what constitutes such actions, then more resources may be found at the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
3. Conflict of Interest
All authors must disclose all relationships or interests that could inappropriately influence or bias their work. Examples of potential conflicts of interest include but are not limited to financial interests (such as membership, employment, consultancies, stocks/shares ownership, honoraria, grants or other funding, paid expert testimonies and patent-licensing arrangements) and non-financial interests (such as personal or professional relationships, affiliations, personal beliefs). Authors should declare any and all conflicts involving myself or my co-authors in the "Comments for the Editor" field via the online submission system. If no conflicts exist, the authors should state: the authors declare no conflicts of interest.