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August 7, 2009 19:37
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I've been following some of the internet discussions about people's complaints | |
about journals. The recent thread on Brian Leiter's blog (http://bit.ly/dvZuC) | |
prompted a few thoughts. Tried to post them on the blog but for some reason it | |
was rejected. I didnt wan't to let this bit of structured procrastination | |
(http://bit.ly/LG7Z) go to waste, so ... | |
The Tasang & Frey paper which Chris Bertram links to | |
(http://www.iew.unizh.ch/wp/iewwp280.pdf) is very interesting and shows that | |
whatever problems there are with peer review are not unique to our discipline. | |
The 'accept as is' (i.e. no 'revise and re-submit') proposal in this paper is | |
an interesting line, and like the other proposals mentioned here should | |
probably be tested by some journal or other to see how it turns out. | |
Peer review is often held up as the gold standard for academic publication, | |
but it's pretty obvious that the whole process has become deeply problematic. | |
One thing which is rarely pointed out (though Tsang & Frey do) is that | |
reviewers are often completely untrained for their task: speaking for myself, | |
I had no idea what counted as a publishable paper when I first started | |
reviewing. New reviewers may have completely unrealistic standards, and they | |
are often inexperienced academics, since the experienced ones are too busy (or | |
let's face it, too world-weary or too grand) to take on this job. | |
'Training' for reviewers is obviously out of the question, of course. And | |
given the current number of journals and submission habits, journals must | |
continue to rely on experienced reviewers. But I think a step in the right | |
direction would be to put more trust/faith in the editors: the editors need | |
not present themselves as even-handedly taking on board everyone's opinion, as | |
if they were all of equal value. Editors should not feel intimidated by the | |
supposed gold standard of 'peer review' to pass the responsibility for | |
evaluation onto the reviewers. They can dismiss reviewer's comments just as | |
they can dismiss a paper. If you don't like editor X's decisions then there | |
are plenty more journals out there. | |
This raises another issue. A number of editors I know have commented that it | |
is difficult to find people to review papers. Surely this has something to do | |
with the increasing number of papers which are submitted, and the still | |
increasing number of journals. I'm sure that the recent decisions to have a | |
moratorium on submissions to various philosophy journals were not taken | |
lightly, but in conditions of considerable pressure. | |
Another radical suggestion which philosophy journals might want to consider, | |
in order to cut the number of submissions, is to charge people a fee for | |
submitting a paper. This might discourage people from submitting papers which | |
(even in their heart of hearts they themselves might admit...) are still not | |
quite finished, or not quite ready yet. (Of course, the journal would have to | |
make sure that the money did not go to the rapacious publishers and was spent | |
on making the journal more efficient.) | |
I don't imagine this would be very popular with the contributors to the thread | |
on Brian's blog but I thought I would mention it anyway. |
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