What Those Responsible for Open Infrastructure in Scholarly Communication Can Do about Possibly Predatory Practices

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Khanna, Saurabh
Data de Publicação: 2022
Outros Autores: Willinsky, John
Tipo de documento: preprint
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: SciELO Preprints
Texto Completo: https://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scielo/preprint/view/3474
Resumo: This chapter presents a three-phase analysis of 521 journals that use the open source publishing platform Open Journal Systems (OJS) while appearing on Beall’s list of predatory publishers and journals and/or inCabells Predatory Reports, both which purport to identify journals that charge authors article processing fees (APC) to publish in the pretense of a peer-reviewed journal. In 2020, 25,671 journals were actively using OJS, with 81.3 percent in the Global South, representing a great growth in global research activities. As members of the Public Knowledge Project, which develops this freely available publishing platform, the authors feel a responsibility to explore what platform developers can do to address both the real problem of duplicitous journals and the over-ascription of the “predatory” label to publishers and journals. represented by the authors of this chapter, Drawing on data from the beacon is a part of OJS, the chapter represents an assessment and intervention In the first phase, the researchers reached out to 50 publishers and 51 journals that use OJS and appear on Beall’s list offering to assist in improving their journal quality. The response from 14 publishers (28.0 percent) among publishers and two journals (3.9 percent) among standalone journals demonstrated a likely misanalysis as “predatory” along multiple dimensions from financial model to peer-review evidence. The second phase, devoted to assessing the degree to which journals using OJS are implicated in this issue, revealed that 2.0 percent of the journals using OJS are on one or both lists. The two phases point to how the identification issue is not that of Beall or Cabells International, but results from a journal tradition of asking readers to take on trust the adherence to scholarly standards. Amid the increase in research and open access to it, the third phase of this study introduces PKP’s new technical strategy for verifying and communicating standards adherence to the public. Work has begun on systems involving trade organizations, such ORCiD and Crossref, for authenticating journal practices (including editorial oversight, peer review, research funding, and data management), while communication strategies include adapting and testing with students and professionals the familiar Nutrition Facts label used with packaged foods. The goal is to provide a publicly accessible industry standard for more reliably assessing journal quality.
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spelling What Those Responsible for Open Infrastructure in Scholarly Communication Can Do about Possibly Predatory Practices Scholarly publishingPredatory joruanlsBibliometricsPublishing platformsScholarly standardsThis chapter presents a three-phase analysis of 521 journals that use the open source publishing platform Open Journal Systems (OJS) while appearing on Beall’s list of predatory publishers and journals and/or inCabells Predatory Reports, both which purport to identify journals that charge authors article processing fees (APC) to publish in the pretense of a peer-reviewed journal. In 2020, 25,671 journals were actively using OJS, with 81.3 percent in the Global South, representing a great growth in global research activities. As members of the Public Knowledge Project, which develops this freely available publishing platform, the authors feel a responsibility to explore what platform developers can do to address both the real problem of duplicitous journals and the over-ascription of the “predatory” label to publishers and journals. represented by the authors of this chapter, Drawing on data from the beacon is a part of OJS, the chapter represents an assessment and intervention In the first phase, the researchers reached out to 50 publishers and 51 journals that use OJS and appear on Beall’s list offering to assist in improving their journal quality. The response from 14 publishers (28.0 percent) among publishers and two journals (3.9 percent) among standalone journals demonstrated a likely misanalysis as “predatory” along multiple dimensions from financial model to peer-review evidence. The second phase, devoted to assessing the degree to which journals using OJS are implicated in this issue, revealed that 2.0 percent of the journals using OJS are on one or both lists. The two phases point to how the identification issue is not that of Beall or Cabells International, but results from a journal tradition of asking readers to take on trust the adherence to scholarly standards. Amid the increase in research and open access to it, the third phase of this study introduces PKP’s new technical strategy for verifying and communicating standards adherence to the public. Work has begun on systems involving trade organizations, such ORCiD and Crossref, for authenticating journal practices (including editorial oversight, peer review, research funding, and data management), while communication strategies include adapting and testing with students and professionals the familiar Nutrition Facts label used with packaged foods. The goal is to provide a publicly accessible industry standard for more reliably assessing journal quality. SciELO PreprintsSciELO PreprintsSciELO Preprints2022-03-14info:eu-repo/semantics/preprintinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionapplication/pdfhttps://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scielo/preprint/view/347410.1590/SciELOPreprints.3474enghttps://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scielo/article/view/3474/7011Copyright (c) 2022 Saurabh Khanna, John Willinskyhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessKhanna, SaurabhWillinsky, Johnreponame:SciELO Preprintsinstname:SciELOinstacron:SCI2022-01-09T21:27:29Zoai:ops.preprints.scielo.org:preprint/3474Servidor de preprintshttps://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scieloONGhttps://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scielo/oaiscielo.submission@scielo.orgopendoar:2022-01-09T21:27:29SciELO Preprints - SciELOfalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv What Those Responsible for Open Infrastructure in Scholarly Communication Can Do about Possibly Predatory Practices
title What Those Responsible for Open Infrastructure in Scholarly Communication Can Do about Possibly Predatory Practices
spellingShingle What Those Responsible for Open Infrastructure in Scholarly Communication Can Do about Possibly Predatory Practices
Khanna, Saurabh
Scholarly publishing
Predatory joruanls
Bibliometrics
Publishing platforms
Scholarly standards
title_short What Those Responsible for Open Infrastructure in Scholarly Communication Can Do about Possibly Predatory Practices
title_full What Those Responsible for Open Infrastructure in Scholarly Communication Can Do about Possibly Predatory Practices
title_fullStr What Those Responsible for Open Infrastructure in Scholarly Communication Can Do about Possibly Predatory Practices
title_full_unstemmed What Those Responsible for Open Infrastructure in Scholarly Communication Can Do about Possibly Predatory Practices
title_sort What Those Responsible for Open Infrastructure in Scholarly Communication Can Do about Possibly Predatory Practices
author Khanna, Saurabh
author_facet Khanna, Saurabh
Willinsky, John
author_role author
author2 Willinsky, John
author2_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Khanna, Saurabh
Willinsky, John
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Scholarly publishing
Predatory joruanls
Bibliometrics
Publishing platforms
Scholarly standards
topic Scholarly publishing
Predatory joruanls
Bibliometrics
Publishing platforms
Scholarly standards
description This chapter presents a three-phase analysis of 521 journals that use the open source publishing platform Open Journal Systems (OJS) while appearing on Beall’s list of predatory publishers and journals and/or inCabells Predatory Reports, both which purport to identify journals that charge authors article processing fees (APC) to publish in the pretense of a peer-reviewed journal. In 2020, 25,671 journals were actively using OJS, with 81.3 percent in the Global South, representing a great growth in global research activities. As members of the Public Knowledge Project, which develops this freely available publishing platform, the authors feel a responsibility to explore what platform developers can do to address both the real problem of duplicitous journals and the over-ascription of the “predatory” label to publishers and journals. represented by the authors of this chapter, Drawing on data from the beacon is a part of OJS, the chapter represents an assessment and intervention In the first phase, the researchers reached out to 50 publishers and 51 journals that use OJS and appear on Beall’s list offering to assist in improving their journal quality. The response from 14 publishers (28.0 percent) among publishers and two journals (3.9 percent) among standalone journals demonstrated a likely misanalysis as “predatory” along multiple dimensions from financial model to peer-review evidence. The second phase, devoted to assessing the degree to which journals using OJS are implicated in this issue, revealed that 2.0 percent of the journals using OJS are on one or both lists. The two phases point to how the identification issue is not that of Beall or Cabells International, but results from a journal tradition of asking readers to take on trust the adherence to scholarly standards. Amid the increase in research and open access to it, the third phase of this study introduces PKP’s new technical strategy for verifying and communicating standards adherence to the public. Work has begun on systems involving trade organizations, such ORCiD and Crossref, for authenticating journal practices (including editorial oversight, peer review, research funding, and data management), while communication strategies include adapting and testing with students and professionals the familiar Nutrition Facts label used with packaged foods. The goal is to provide a publicly accessible industry standard for more reliably assessing journal quality.
publishDate 2022
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url https://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scielo/preprint/view/3474
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dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv https://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scielo/article/view/3474/7011
dc.rights.driver.fl_str_mv Copyright (c) 2022 Saurabh Khanna, John Willinsky
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