Getting by in a bibliometric economy: scholarly publishing and academic credibility in the Nigerian academy

David S. Mills, A. Branford
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Abstract

Abstract Why are Nigeria’s universities launching a growing number of open access journals while simultaneously expecting their academic staff to publish ‘internationally’? And what impact do these expectations have on Nigerian journals? Drawing on interviews with editors and publishers, we describe the emergence of a hyperlocal ‘credibility economy’ within the Nigerian academy. The great majority of Nigerian scholarly journals are excluded from Scopus and Web of Science, the two main global citation indexes. Stigmatized by geography, Nigerian journals are ignored, rendered invisible, classed as poor quality or condemned as ‘predatory’. Historicizing these trends, we illustrate our argument with four case studies: two science and technology journals hosted by universities and two independent publishers, one with expertise in African studies, the other in information studies. In each case, we explore the motivations, commitments and strategies of editors and publishers. Their stories exemplify the impact of colonial histories, global discourses and bibliometric infrastructures on African research publishing cultures. The histories, logics and fragilities of this regional research ecosystem reveal how Africa’s scholars and publishers are getting by – but only just – amid the metricized judgements of the global research economy.
在文献计量经济中生存:尼日利亚学术界的学术出版和学术信誉
为什么尼日利亚的大学在开办越来越多的开放获取期刊的同时,又期望他们的学术人员在“国际”上发表文章?这些期望对尼日利亚的期刊有什么影响?通过对编辑和出版商的采访,我们描述了尼日利亚学术界出现的一种超本地化的“可信度经济”。绝大多数尼日利亚学术期刊被排除在Scopus和Web of Science这两个主要的全球引文索引之外。由于地理位置的原因,尼日利亚的期刊被忽视、被忽视、被归类为质量差或被谴责为“掠夺性”。将这些趋势历史化,我们用四个案例研究来说明我们的论点:两个由大学主办的科技期刊和两个独立出版商,一个在非洲研究方面有专长,另一个在信息研究方面有专长。在每种情况下,我们都探讨了编辑和出版商的动机、承诺和策略。他们的故事体现了殖民历史、全球话语和文献计量基础设施对非洲研究出版文化的影响。这个区域研究生态系统的历史、逻辑和脆弱性揭示了非洲的学者和出版商是如何在全球研究经济的量化判断中勉强度日的。
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