栖息在阴囊上的采采蝇:学术期刊的出版问题

Q3 Social Sciences
A. Diala, Nejat Hussein
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引用次数: 0

摘要

南非的研究奖励制度对在高等教育与培训部 "认可 "的刊物上发表论文的教师和附属机构给予奖励。这种可以说是不正当的激励措施使学术研究成为一种潜在的激进数字游戏。而同行评审的不当拖延、难以找到专家评审员以及对谁是 "同行 "的认识不清等因素又加剧了这一现象。尽管研究人员面临着 "要么发表,要么毁灭 "的压力,而且许多期刊禁止平行投稿,但对南非期刊发表问题的研究却少之又少。根据文献调查、编辑经验以及与同行的交流,本文试图就这些问题展开对话,并将其描述为栖息在阴囊上的采采蝇。一方面,当前的激励制度将成果商品化,将人们的注意力从开展具有社会响应性的研究来积累知识转移到为大学和作者积累资金上。另一方面,编辑对 "同行 "的不恰当解释以及同行评价的无偿性质阻碍了出版过程。我们认为,这种情况削弱了学术的卓越性,助长了掠夺性期刊的发展,并可能损害国家发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Tsetse Fly Perched on the Scrotum: Publishing Problems in Academic Journals
South Africa's research incentive system rewards faculty members and affiliates for publishing in outlets that are "accredited" by the Department of Higher Education and Training. This arguably perverse incentive makes academic research a potentially aggressive numbers game. It is compounded by factors such as undue delay in peer review, difficulty in securing expert evaluators, and poor understanding of who constitutes a "peer". Despite the "publish or perish" pressure on researchers and the prohibition of the parallel submission of manuscripts by many journals, there is negligible research on publishing problems in South African journals. Informed by a literature survey, editorial experience and conversations with colleagues, this article seeks a dialogue about these problems, which it characterises as a tsetse fly perched on the scrotum. On the one hand, the current incentive system commodifies outputs and diverts attention from building knowledge with socially responsive research to building the financial coffers of universities and authors. On the other hand, inappropriate editorial interpretations of a "peer" and the gratis nature of peer evaluation encumber the publishing process. We argue that this situation erodes academic excellence, encourages the growth of predatory journals, and potentially harms national development.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
67
审稿时长
24 weeks
期刊介绍: PELJ/PER publishes contributions relevant to development in the South African constitutional state. This means that most contributions will concern some aspect of constitutionalism or legal development. The fact that the South African constitutional state is the focus, does not limit the content of PELJ/PER to the South African legal system, since development law and constitutionalism are excellent themes for comparative work. Contributions on any aspect or discipline of the law from any part of the world are thus welcomed.
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