凡事都有季节 ...

IF 2.9 2区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY
Elaine Stratford
{"title":"凡事都有季节 ...","authors":"Elaine Stratford","doi":"10.1111/1745-5871.12685","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Since December 2015, it has been my singular privilege and pleasure to serve as editor-in-chief of this journal, to work with and for the Institute of Australian Geographers Council and our publisher, Wiley, and to champion geography in any way I could through such means. At the end of November this year—10 years in—I will lay down that service and step into a new role as senior associate editor.</p><p>It is time, and it is good to know that it is time.</p><p>My decision to encourage rejuvenation on the team has been made and staged over several months. In Brian Cook, Patrick Moss, Clare Mouat, and Miriam Williams, we now have a group of associate editors with diverse disciplinary and academic and other skills and energy aplenty. In Alexander Burton, we have a committed early career academic as book editor. Kirstie Petrou has been with me for the full decade and has been a wonderful editorial assistant throughout and will continue in that role. I am in her debt. Our editorial board includes diverse and dedicated members on whom we can rely. And I have had the absolute pleasure of working with Wiley staff who are fully focused on the merits of journal publishing. In recent years, that team has included Rebecca Ciezarek, Simon Goudie, Emy Rubano, Eden Batol, Lilly O’Scanaill, Martha Rundell, and Ashlinn Theroux. Huge thanks to all and to the many unseen staff at the publishers, as well.</p><p>I have been incredibly grateful to work with successive supportive IAG Councils, which have allowed me great creative freedom and autonomy, aspects of working life I value most highly. And while I leave it to Council, rightly, to announce my replacement I am delighted that my recommendation has been endorsed. Readers of our journal will learn more about that person in weeks and months following the publication of this, my last issue at the helm. Watch this space!</p><p>For my last editorial reflections, and before turning to introduce the papers in this issue, I wanted to share insights I gained from attending a Wiley editors’ workshop in London, fortuitously held the day before I left the UK after a month in the archives in September [thanks Simon!].</p><p>There, I learned a great deal that I think will shape publishing in general and in this journal in coming years—and I think the pace of change will only increase, requiring of us both the energy to seize opportunities and the nous to do so critically and creatively.</p><p>The full-day workshop was held on 18 September in a lovely four-storey building on the corner of Fitzroy Square, within “coo-ee” of University College London, which is enticingly embedded among the streets of Camden. Among the 100 or so in attendance were Wiley staff, editors from journals across the span of disciplines from humanities to physics and medical science, and consultants such as James Butcher—who has a long track record of academic publishing with <i>Nature</i> and a business and a fascinating blog, Journal·ology. It was also a little sobering to learn that Wiley works with around 50,000 editors whose tenures range from 1 to 50 years’ duration. Below, I refer to three of presentations because I think they are likely to be of most interest to this journal’s broad readership.</p><p>Allyn Molina, lead of the publishing development team, reminded us of the crucial importance of a vision for all journals and of the need to reflect that vision in journals’ statements of aims and scope. In coming weeks, our team will be looking hard at our own statements in light of that insight—again, there are seasons for such reflections and now is a great time for that work in our circle of influence. Allyn also spoke about how challenging publishing is, and her descriptions reminded me of the strong headwinds we face in the academy. Many perturbations are held in common—AI, market forces, or the need for vigilance in relation to ethics and proper conduct. Many of the qualities needed to deal with those headwinds also have parallels across our two entangled sectors. Among them are adaptability and flexibility, qualities that are decidedly different from tendencies to be undirected or unreflexive. There is also a need to be innovative while respecting longstanding traditions that aren’t simply bolted on but have a robust logic behind them.</p><p>Liz Ferguson, Senior VP, Research Publishing, then spoke about Wiley’s work to shape scholarly publishing. Responsible for 2000 journals, Liz focuses on transformational change in research and publishing infrastructures and on rapidly changing expectations of publishers from among authors, reviewers, editors, and readers. New technologies should allow for greater transparency, integrity, and simplicity of process but all that has to be road-tested. Editors and their teams are crucial collaborators in that work. Liz also referred to the well-publicised uptick in plagiarism and the abuse of publishing in paper mills. In that, AI is clearly both a blessing and a bane and Wiley staff are constantly asking how to use it in detection, but also in a vast array of work processes meant to complement and enhance human decision-making. She said that everyone is sharply cognisant of the need for stringent care in how Wiley engages with these developments.</p><p>Conversation then turned to peer review and Liz noted—as did we all—that it is increasingly challenging to secure reviewers, partly because of the volume of submissions and partly because of workloads and growing numbers of submissions from regions not part of the traditional authorship base. Wiley is apparently on target for receiving a million submissions a year and—with 300,000 journals in total in its “stable”—is seen as a relatively small publisher in comparative terms. Overall, there are reportedly 4.2 million papers submitted for review each year and Liz thought that AI is, and will be a significant force in how initial vetting processes and reviews are handled in the [near] future. As readers may appreciate, that conjecture was one of the more contentiously debated points made during the day.</p><p>James Butcher, whom I introduced above, then spoke about his journey from editor to international publishing consultant before turning to consider several questions. I confess that I was sufficiently rivetted that I wrote down almost every word on his slides—so please consider the next paragraph largely verbatim and credit him.</p><p><i>What do journals do?</i> Filter, enhance, amplify. <i>What makes a journal impactful?</i> Leadership; convening power or a space for conversations that matter; vehicle for cross-pollination across disciplines; an early warning system for important advances for readers; capacity to enhance recognition and visibility; and a method to train the next generation.</p><p><i>What do authors and readers want?</i> Authors want to be published and read by peers; have their message amplified to and by a wider research community; get career credit; have quick decisions—especially first decisions; have fair treatment; have research as part of their personal academic histories both registered and preserved; and be published in open access sources. Readers want to save time; get trustworthy content; have easy access to research; understand trends and topics in their field; and “stand on the shoulders of giants” by doing their own research. James also emphasised the point that open access models have shifted the balance from readers to authors, and argued that we forget the former at our peril. Writers write to be read, after all.</p><p><i>How do technologies support editors?</i> Some do not! Peer review systems such as Clarivate, ejournal press, and editorial manager date from the 1990s and have reached their shelf-life. However, their replacements are so difficult to orchestrate that some operations—Frontiers and MDPI noteworthy among them—built their own bespoke systems and appeared to have no legacy challenges. Two other ventures, IOP Publisher and Morressier, have partnered to develop new submission and peer-review systems. Kotahi is another to watch, alongside the ChronosHub author interface. I confess all that was absolutely news to me, and it shows the crucial importance of continuous professional development for editors and their teams.</p><p><i>What about research integrity systems?</i> According to James, new tools are being launched at pace, among them Proofig, Geppetto and SnapShot, and Dimensions Research Integrity—none of which I had heard of and all of which I am still trying to learn about. Clear Skies and Signals apparently detect paper mills. For me, the important point James made at that juncture in his talk is the need for editors to <i>collaborate</i> rather than compete in monitoring paper mill activity. In aid of such conduct, just launched is a new tool called Argos, which uses data from CrossRef’s retraction watch database to provide visibility on problematic papers, authors, journals, and publishers. It should soon provide journalists and research integrity sleuths access to such information, and James was confident that, shortly, there will be nowhere for unconscionable authors to hide, especially at point of submission.</p><p>After that slightly deflating part of the conversation, I was pleased that James asked <i>what does your journal stand for?</i> He suggested that all editorial teams should be able to articulate “we believe x, y, and z” and “we support those beliefs by a, b, and c”. I am confident that we do such work in our journal and that we can always do more and better.</p><p>Editors were also asked <i>how will you make your journal impactful?</i> As part of the ensuing conversation, we explored what impact might be: attracting high quality submissions; amplifying authors’ messages; encouraging well-crafted and compelling special sections or issues; leading editorial teams; and training the next generation (and here I made the comment that “next” is not default for “young” since many academics are in mid-life by the time they enter their early career stage, and we should remember that). For James, rightly I think, the upshot of all of the content he had shared required that journal teams find ways to attract those writers and readers; make sound decisions about content; engage in creative outreach; be constructively critical and innovative in how we respond to change of various kinds, technology not least among them; and be unfailingly trustworthy.</p><p>This issue leads with work that continues our special commentaries on COVID-19, the fallout from which includes a new variant and the challenges its poses. Specifically, Rosina Moreno and Esther Vayá (<span>2024</span>) have written a fascinating paper on an epicentre of the original pandemic, considering its geographical distribution and evolution in waves across Spain. [If readers are interested in viewing the backlog of papers, we assembled a first virtual issue in 2023 and will do so again in 2025. Check out the virtual issues section under “browse” on the journal homepage.]</p><p>Work by Michael-Shawn Fletcher et al. (<span>2024</span>) on reconciling 22,000 years of landscape openness in the Tasmanian “wilderness” is a fine, sweeping example of how geography can be applied not only across borders within the discipline but with others, such as archaeology. Of particular note is their sharp focus on how insights from science can and must inform efforts to decolonise knowledge and land use practices.</p><p>Their article is complemented by another about how we are Country and how Country mentors us, led by early career academic, Matilda Harry et al. (<span>2024</span>). They make an important call for relations between Country and First Nations young people to centre on <i>research</i> mentorship practice, policies, and program frameworks and I think there is much for us to learn from in this work and apply in our own.</p><p>In a challenging paper on the emotional geographies of roadkill and its cumulative effects on tourists’ experiences of Tasmania, Elleke Leurs et al. (<span>2024</span>) have found that “unplanned, sporadic, unexpected, and confronting encounters with dead animals detract from the tourism experience for most” and especially for women. They have also suggested the need for more research on these animal geographies on mainland Australia, and in Canada and South Africa, where roadkill is also problematic.</p><p>Douglas Bardsley and colleagues (<span>2024</span>) venture into the challenges of governing hydrosocial risk in peri-urban South Australia, a pronouncedly dry place and also a centre of viticulture. Focusing on that industry, the authors consider the range of challenges to instituting hydrosocial policies and practices and point to the crucial functions that collaboration, trust, and adaptation will have in such labours. Insights from their work are, I think, applicable to both other sectors and regions.</p><p>In recent issues, we have featured work on geography, pedagogy, and learning and teaching, and Jeana Kriewaldt and her colleagues (<span>2024</span>) add to that corpus in a paper comparing teachers’ beliefs and actions during collaborative geographical inquiry. Specifically, they have conducted fine-grain, filmed interactions of the micro-spatial elements of teacher–student interactions during geography inquiry-based learning—a double focus on classroom geographies and geography in the classroom I find immensely appealing [on which, to be briefly self-referential, see Stratford et al., <span>2022</span>]. Of note, Kriewaldt and her colleagues have found that teachers’ guiding actions in certain locations in classrooms influenced the dynamics of inquiry and educational outcomes.</p><p>Two works from Indonesia and China complete the complement of papers in this issue. The first centres on migratory outcomes across localities and generations in Kupang, Indonesia. In it, Fandi Akhmad et al. (<span>2024</span>) have shown how entrepreneurial migration generated sufficient income for workers moving to Kupang to support daily living expenses, children’s education, and investments “back home.” However, migrants were also subjected to certain difficult vagaries that characterise the informal sector in particular. In such cases especially, but in all cases more generally, social networks, knowledge, and reciprocity were crucial for migrants to settle and succeed.</p><p>The second paper, by Yang Liu and Ming Luo (<span>2024</span>), is about the search of an imagined China among international students from Europe, North and South America, and Oceania seeking to study there. Students’ ideas about what China “is” vary significantly and motivate their migration decision-making in ways that could inform how their destination choices are shaped and could explain China’s changing status in international student migration trends.</p><p>Then, Guy Robinson (<span>2024</span>) has provided a comprehensive, appreciative reading of Peter Wohlleben’s 2023 book <i>The power of trees: How ancient forests can save us if we let them</i>. These kinds of book reviews have remained a part of the journal when many others have stopped providing them and I am so pleased we continue to support critical reflections on works longer than papers!</p><p>And finally, Ruth Fincher et al. (<span>2024</span>) have paid homage to the wonderful Janice Monk, Australian-American feminist geographer, who graced the discipline and austral, northern, and international geography organisations for more than five decades. A companion obituary has also been published in our sibling, <i>Australian Geographer</i>, and I commend that to you as well.</p><p>And that, as they say, is that … a wrap.</p><p>It has been my delight to serve this journal and its associated entities, networks, individuals, and groups over the last decade and I look forward to coming back in the new year in a new and supportive role.</p><p>Our collective intention is to continue to provide the highest quality journal of which we are capable, alongside a regular webinar, lectures at the IAG conferences, and Wiley prizes for highly commendable papers published each year.</p><p>Given the strong headwinds before us, I am certain that creative and critically constructive changes will characterise the journal’s vision, aims and scope, work, and appearance in coming years, and I think that such refreshing cycles are crucial for all those working on journal publishing in whatever guise.</p><p>With sincere best wishes to all and heartfelt thanks for the experience of a lifetime.</p>","PeriodicalId":47233,"journal":{"name":"Geographical Research","volume":"62 4","pages":"482-485"},"PeriodicalIF":2.9000,"publicationDate":"2024-11-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1745-5871.12685","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"For everything there is a season …\",\"authors\":\"Elaine Stratford\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/1745-5871.12685\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Since December 2015, it has been my singular privilege and pleasure to serve as editor-in-chief of this journal, to work with and for the Institute of Australian Geographers Council and our publisher, Wiley, and to champion geography in any way I could through such means. At the end of November this year—10 years in—I will lay down that service and step into a new role as senior associate editor.</p><p>It is time, and it is good to know that it is time.</p><p>My decision to encourage rejuvenation on the team has been made and staged over several months. In Brian Cook, Patrick Moss, Clare Mouat, and Miriam Williams, we now have a group of associate editors with diverse disciplinary and academic and other skills and energy aplenty. In Alexander Burton, we have a committed early career academic as book editor. Kirstie Petrou has been with me for the full decade and has been a wonderful editorial assistant throughout and will continue in that role. I am in her debt. Our editorial board includes diverse and dedicated members on whom we can rely. And I have had the absolute pleasure of working with Wiley staff who are fully focused on the merits of journal publishing. In recent years, that team has included Rebecca Ciezarek, Simon Goudie, Emy Rubano, Eden Batol, Lilly O’Scanaill, Martha Rundell, and Ashlinn Theroux. Huge thanks to all and to the many unseen staff at the publishers, as well.</p><p>I have been incredibly grateful to work with successive supportive IAG Councils, which have allowed me great creative freedom and autonomy, aspects of working life I value most highly. And while I leave it to Council, rightly, to announce my replacement I am delighted that my recommendation has been endorsed. Readers of our journal will learn more about that person in weeks and months following the publication of this, my last issue at the helm. Watch this space!</p><p>For my last editorial reflections, and before turning to introduce the papers in this issue, I wanted to share insights I gained from attending a Wiley editors’ workshop in London, fortuitously held the day before I left the UK after a month in the archives in September [thanks Simon!].</p><p>There, I learned a great deal that I think will shape publishing in general and in this journal in coming years—and I think the pace of change will only increase, requiring of us both the energy to seize opportunities and the nous to do so critically and creatively.</p><p>The full-day workshop was held on 18 September in a lovely four-storey building on the corner of Fitzroy Square, within “coo-ee” of University College London, which is enticingly embedded among the streets of Camden. Among the 100 or so in attendance were Wiley staff, editors from journals across the span of disciplines from humanities to physics and medical science, and consultants such as James Butcher—who has a long track record of academic publishing with <i>Nature</i> and a business and a fascinating blog, Journal·ology. It was also a little sobering to learn that Wiley works with around 50,000 editors whose tenures range from 1 to 50 years’ duration. Below, I refer to three of presentations because I think they are likely to be of most interest to this journal’s broad readership.</p><p>Allyn Molina, lead of the publishing development team, reminded us of the crucial importance of a vision for all journals and of the need to reflect that vision in journals’ statements of aims and scope. In coming weeks, our team will be looking hard at our own statements in light of that insight—again, there are seasons for such reflections and now is a great time for that work in our circle of influence. Allyn also spoke about how challenging publishing is, and her descriptions reminded me of the strong headwinds we face in the academy. Many perturbations are held in common—AI, market forces, or the need for vigilance in relation to ethics and proper conduct. Many of the qualities needed to deal with those headwinds also have parallels across our two entangled sectors. Among them are adaptability and flexibility, qualities that are decidedly different from tendencies to be undirected or unreflexive. There is also a need to be innovative while respecting longstanding traditions that aren’t simply bolted on but have a robust logic behind them.</p><p>Liz Ferguson, Senior VP, Research Publishing, then spoke about Wiley’s work to shape scholarly publishing. Responsible for 2000 journals, Liz focuses on transformational change in research and publishing infrastructures and on rapidly changing expectations of publishers from among authors, reviewers, editors, and readers. New technologies should allow for greater transparency, integrity, and simplicity of process but all that has to be road-tested. Editors and their teams are crucial collaborators in that work. Liz also referred to the well-publicised uptick in plagiarism and the abuse of publishing in paper mills. In that, AI is clearly both a blessing and a bane and Wiley staff are constantly asking how to use it in detection, but also in a vast array of work processes meant to complement and enhance human decision-making. She said that everyone is sharply cognisant of the need for stringent care in how Wiley engages with these developments.</p><p>Conversation then turned to peer review and Liz noted—as did we all—that it is increasingly challenging to secure reviewers, partly because of the volume of submissions and partly because of workloads and growing numbers of submissions from regions not part of the traditional authorship base. Wiley is apparently on target for receiving a million submissions a year and—with 300,000 journals in total in its “stable”—is seen as a relatively small publisher in comparative terms. Overall, there are reportedly 4.2 million papers submitted for review each year and Liz thought that AI is, and will be a significant force in how initial vetting processes and reviews are handled in the [near] future. As readers may appreciate, that conjecture was one of the more contentiously debated points made during the day.</p><p>James Butcher, whom I introduced above, then spoke about his journey from editor to international publishing consultant before turning to consider several questions. I confess that I was sufficiently rivetted that I wrote down almost every word on his slides—so please consider the next paragraph largely verbatim and credit him.</p><p><i>What do journals do?</i> Filter, enhance, amplify. <i>What makes a journal impactful?</i> Leadership; convening power or a space for conversations that matter; vehicle for cross-pollination across disciplines; an early warning system for important advances for readers; capacity to enhance recognition and visibility; and a method to train the next generation.</p><p><i>What do authors and readers want?</i> Authors want to be published and read by peers; have their message amplified to and by a wider research community; get career credit; have quick decisions—especially first decisions; have fair treatment; have research as part of their personal academic histories both registered and preserved; and be published in open access sources. Readers want to save time; get trustworthy content; have easy access to research; understand trends and topics in their field; and “stand on the shoulders of giants” by doing their own research. James also emphasised the point that open access models have shifted the balance from readers to authors, and argued that we forget the former at our peril. Writers write to be read, after all.</p><p><i>How do technologies support editors?</i> Some do not! Peer review systems such as Clarivate, ejournal press, and editorial manager date from the 1990s and have reached their shelf-life. However, their replacements are so difficult to orchestrate that some operations—Frontiers and MDPI noteworthy among them—built their own bespoke systems and appeared to have no legacy challenges. Two other ventures, IOP Publisher and Morressier, have partnered to develop new submission and peer-review systems. Kotahi is another to watch, alongside the ChronosHub author interface. I confess all that was absolutely news to me, and it shows the crucial importance of continuous professional development for editors and their teams.</p><p><i>What about research integrity systems?</i> According to James, new tools are being launched at pace, among them Proofig, Geppetto and SnapShot, and Dimensions Research Integrity—none of which I had heard of and all of which I am still trying to learn about. Clear Skies and Signals apparently detect paper mills. For me, the important point James made at that juncture in his talk is the need for editors to <i>collaborate</i> rather than compete in monitoring paper mill activity. In aid of such conduct, just launched is a new tool called Argos, which uses data from CrossRef’s retraction watch database to provide visibility on problematic papers, authors, journals, and publishers. It should soon provide journalists and research integrity sleuths access to such information, and James was confident that, shortly, there will be nowhere for unconscionable authors to hide, especially at point of submission.</p><p>After that slightly deflating part of the conversation, I was pleased that James asked <i>what does your journal stand for?</i> He suggested that all editorial teams should be able to articulate “we believe x, y, and z” and “we support those beliefs by a, b, and c”. I am confident that we do such work in our journal and that we can always do more and better.</p><p>Editors were also asked <i>how will you make your journal impactful?</i> As part of the ensuing conversation, we explored what impact might be: attracting high quality submissions; amplifying authors’ messages; encouraging well-crafted and compelling special sections or issues; leading editorial teams; and training the next generation (and here I made the comment that “next” is not default for “young” since many academics are in mid-life by the time they enter their early career stage, and we should remember that). For James, rightly I think, the upshot of all of the content he had shared required that journal teams find ways to attract those writers and readers; make sound decisions about content; engage in creative outreach; be constructively critical and innovative in how we respond to change of various kinds, technology not least among them; and be unfailingly trustworthy.</p><p>This issue leads with work that continues our special commentaries on COVID-19, the fallout from which includes a new variant and the challenges its poses. Specifically, Rosina Moreno and Esther Vayá (<span>2024</span>) have written a fascinating paper on an epicentre of the original pandemic, considering its geographical distribution and evolution in waves across Spain. [If readers are interested in viewing the backlog of papers, we assembled a first virtual issue in 2023 and will do so again in 2025. Check out the virtual issues section under “browse” on the journal homepage.]</p><p>Work by Michael-Shawn Fletcher et al. (<span>2024</span>) on reconciling 22,000 years of landscape openness in the Tasmanian “wilderness” is a fine, sweeping example of how geography can be applied not only across borders within the discipline but with others, such as archaeology. Of particular note is their sharp focus on how insights from science can and must inform efforts to decolonise knowledge and land use practices.</p><p>Their article is complemented by another about how we are Country and how Country mentors us, led by early career academic, Matilda Harry et al. (<span>2024</span>). They make an important call for relations between Country and First Nations young people to centre on <i>research</i> mentorship practice, policies, and program frameworks and I think there is much for us to learn from in this work and apply in our own.</p><p>In a challenging paper on the emotional geographies of roadkill and its cumulative effects on tourists’ experiences of Tasmania, Elleke Leurs et al. (<span>2024</span>) have found that “unplanned, sporadic, unexpected, and confronting encounters with dead animals detract from the tourism experience for most” and especially for women. They have also suggested the need for more research on these animal geographies on mainland Australia, and in Canada and South Africa, where roadkill is also problematic.</p><p>Douglas Bardsley and colleagues (<span>2024</span>) venture into the challenges of governing hydrosocial risk in peri-urban South Australia, a pronouncedly dry place and also a centre of viticulture. Focusing on that industry, the authors consider the range of challenges to instituting hydrosocial policies and practices and point to the crucial functions that collaboration, trust, and adaptation will have in such labours. Insights from their work are, I think, applicable to both other sectors and regions.</p><p>In recent issues, we have featured work on geography, pedagogy, and learning and teaching, and Jeana Kriewaldt and her colleagues (<span>2024</span>) add to that corpus in a paper comparing teachers’ beliefs and actions during collaborative geographical inquiry. Specifically, they have conducted fine-grain, filmed interactions of the micro-spatial elements of teacher–student interactions during geography inquiry-based learning—a double focus on classroom geographies and geography in the classroom I find immensely appealing [on which, to be briefly self-referential, see Stratford et al., <span>2022</span>]. Of note, Kriewaldt and her colleagues have found that teachers’ guiding actions in certain locations in classrooms influenced the dynamics of inquiry and educational outcomes.</p><p>Two works from Indonesia and China complete the complement of papers in this issue. The first centres on migratory outcomes across localities and generations in Kupang, Indonesia. In it, Fandi Akhmad et al. (<span>2024</span>) have shown how entrepreneurial migration generated sufficient income for workers moving to Kupang to support daily living expenses, children’s education, and investments “back home.” However, migrants were also subjected to certain difficult vagaries that characterise the informal sector in particular. In such cases especially, but in all cases more generally, social networks, knowledge, and reciprocity were crucial for migrants to settle and succeed.</p><p>The second paper, by Yang Liu and Ming Luo (<span>2024</span>), is about the search of an imagined China among international students from Europe, North and South America, and Oceania seeking to study there. Students’ ideas about what China “is” vary significantly and motivate their migration decision-making in ways that could inform how their destination choices are shaped and could explain China’s changing status in international student migration trends.</p><p>Then, Guy Robinson (<span>2024</span>) has provided a comprehensive, appreciative reading of Peter Wohlleben’s 2023 book <i>The power of trees: How ancient forests can save us if we let them</i>. These kinds of book reviews have remained a part of the journal when many others have stopped providing them and I am so pleased we continue to support critical reflections on works longer than papers!</p><p>And finally, Ruth Fincher et al. (<span>2024</span>) have paid homage to the wonderful Janice Monk, Australian-American feminist geographer, who graced the discipline and austral, northern, and international geography organisations for more than five decades. A companion obituary has also been published in our sibling, <i>Australian Geographer</i>, and I commend that to you as well.</p><p>And that, as they say, is that … a wrap.</p><p>It has been my delight to serve this journal and its associated entities, networks, individuals, and groups over the last decade and I look forward to coming back in the new year in a new and supportive role.</p><p>Our collective intention is to continue to provide the highest quality journal of which we are capable, alongside a regular webinar, lectures at the IAG conferences, and Wiley prizes for highly commendable papers published each year.</p><p>Given the strong headwinds before us, I am certain that creative and critically constructive changes will characterise the journal’s vision, aims and scope, work, and appearance in coming years, and I think that such refreshing cycles are crucial for all those working on journal publishing in whatever guise.</p><p>With sincere best wishes to all and heartfelt thanks for the experience of a lifetime.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":47233,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Geographical Research\",\"volume\":\"62 4\",\"pages\":\"482-485\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":2.9000,\"publicationDate\":\"2024-11-07\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1745-5871.12685\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Geographical Research\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"90\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1745-5871.12685\",\"RegionNum\":2,\"RegionCategory\":\"社会学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"GEOGRAPHY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Geographical Research","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1745-5871.12685","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"GEOGRAPHY","Score":null,"Total":0}
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摘要

自2015年12月以来,我一直非常荣幸和高兴地担任本刊的主编,与澳大利亚地理学家学会理事会和我们的出版商Wiley合作,并通过这些方式尽我所能地支持地理学。今年 11 月底,我将卸任本职工作,转而担任高级副主编一职,至今已有 10 年时间。布莱恩-库克(Brian Cook)、帕特里克-莫斯(Patrick Moss)、克莱尔-穆特(Clare Mouat)和米里亚姆-威廉姆斯(Miriam Williams)是我们现在的副主编,他们拥有不同的学科、学术和其他技能,精力充沛。亚历山大-伯顿(Alexander Burton)是我们的图书编辑,他是一位坚定的早期职业学者。基尔斯蒂-佩特罗(Kirstie Petrou)与我共事了整整十年,一直是我出色的编辑助理,她将继续担任这一职务。我对她感激不尽。我们的编辑委员会成员来自不同的领域,工作兢兢业业,值得信赖。我非常荣幸能与 Wiley 的员工共事,他们全神贯注于期刊出版的优点。近年来,这个团队的成员包括丽贝卡-切扎雷克(Rebecca Ciezarek)、西蒙-古迪(Simon Goudie)、埃米-鲁巴诺(Emy Rubano)、伊登-巴托尔(Eden Batol)、莉莉-奥斯卡奈尔(Lilly O'Scanaill)、玛莎-伦德尔(Martha Rundell)和阿什琳-特鲁(Ashlinn Theroux)。我非常感谢能与历届支持我的国际出版商协会理事会合作,这让我有了极大的创作自由和自主权,这也是我最看重的工作生活方面。我很高兴我的推荐得到了理事会的认可。本刊读者将在本期,也是我执掌本刊的最后一期刊物出版后的数周或数月内了解到更多关于接替者的信息。敬请期待!作为我最后的编辑感言,在介绍本期论文之前,我想和大家分享一下我参加伦敦 Wiley 编辑研讨会的感悟,这次研讨会恰好是我在 9 月份结束一个月的档案工作离开英国的前一天举办的[感谢 Simon!]。在那里,我学到了很多东西,我认为这些东西将在未来几年内影响整个出版业和本刊的发展--我认为变革的步伐只会加快,这要求我们既要有抓住机遇的精力,又要有批判性和创造性的智慧。9 月 18 日,全天的研讨会在菲茨罗伊广场拐角处的一栋可爱的四层楼建筑里举行,菲茨罗伊广场就在伦敦大学学院的 "coo-ee "内,而伦敦大学学院则坐落在卡姆登(Camden)的街道中,十分诱人。与会的 100 多人中有威利的员工、来自人文、物理和医学等不同学科的期刊编辑,还有詹姆斯-布彻(James Butcher)这样的顾问--他长期在《自然》杂志从事学术出版工作,同时还经营着一家企业和一个有趣的博客 Journal-ology。此外,我们还了解到,威利与大约50,000名编辑合作,他们的任期从1年到50年不等。出版发展团队负责人艾林-莫利纳(Allyn Molina)提醒我们,所有期刊的愿景都至关重要,必须在期刊的目标和范围声明中反映出这一愿景。未来几周,我们的团队将根据这一见解认真审视我们自己的声明--同样,这种反思是有季节性的,而现在正是在我们的影响范围内开展这项工作的大好时机。艾琳还谈到了出版工作的挑战性,她的描述让我想起了我们在学术界面临的强大逆风。人工智能、市场力量或需要对道德和正当行为保持警惕等许多干扰因素都是共同的。应对这些逆风所需的许多素质在我们这两个相互纠缠的部门中也有相似之处。其中包括适应性和灵活性,这些品质与不定向或不反思的倾向截然不同。研究出版高级副总裁利兹-弗格森(Liz Ferguson)随后谈到了威利在塑造学术出版方面的工作。Liz 负责管理 2000 种期刊,重点关注研究和出版基础设施的转型变革,以及作者、审稿人、编辑和读者对出版商期望的快速变化。新技术应能提高流程的透明度、完整性和简便性,但所有这些都必须经过实践检验。编辑及其团队是这项工作的重要合作者。Liz 还提到了广为人知的剽窃和滥用纸厂出版的现象。 学生们对中国 "是什么 "的看法大相径庭,这也是他们做出移民决定的动因,可以说明他们的目的地选择是如何形成的,也可以解释中国在留学生移民趋势中不断变化的地位:如果我们允许,古老的森林如何拯救我们。我很高兴我们继续支持对长于论文的作品进行批判性反思!最后,露丝-芬奇等人(2024 年)向杰出的美籍澳大利亚女性主义地理学家珍妮丝-蒙克(Janice Monk)致敬,她在五十多年的时间里为本学科以及澳大利亚、北方和国际地理学组织增添了光彩。在过去的十年里,我很高兴能为本刊及其相关实体、网络、个人和团体服务,我期待着在新的一年里以新的支持性角色重返本刊。我们的共同目标是继续提供我们所能提供的最高质量的期刊,同时定期举办网络研讨会,在国际学术团体会议上发表演讲,并为每年发表的值得高度赞扬的论文颁发威利奖。考虑到我们面临的强劲逆风,我确信,在未来几年中,期刊的愿景、目标和范围、工作和外观都将发生具有创造性和批判性的建设性变化,我认为,对于所有以任何形式从事期刊出版工作的人来说,这种焕然一新的周期都是至关重要的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
For everything there is a season …

Since December 2015, it has been my singular privilege and pleasure to serve as editor-in-chief of this journal, to work with and for the Institute of Australian Geographers Council and our publisher, Wiley, and to champion geography in any way I could through such means. At the end of November this year—10 years in—I will lay down that service and step into a new role as senior associate editor.

It is time, and it is good to know that it is time.

My decision to encourage rejuvenation on the team has been made and staged over several months. In Brian Cook, Patrick Moss, Clare Mouat, and Miriam Williams, we now have a group of associate editors with diverse disciplinary and academic and other skills and energy aplenty. In Alexander Burton, we have a committed early career academic as book editor. Kirstie Petrou has been with me for the full decade and has been a wonderful editorial assistant throughout and will continue in that role. I am in her debt. Our editorial board includes diverse and dedicated members on whom we can rely. And I have had the absolute pleasure of working with Wiley staff who are fully focused on the merits of journal publishing. In recent years, that team has included Rebecca Ciezarek, Simon Goudie, Emy Rubano, Eden Batol, Lilly O’Scanaill, Martha Rundell, and Ashlinn Theroux. Huge thanks to all and to the many unseen staff at the publishers, as well.

I have been incredibly grateful to work with successive supportive IAG Councils, which have allowed me great creative freedom and autonomy, aspects of working life I value most highly. And while I leave it to Council, rightly, to announce my replacement I am delighted that my recommendation has been endorsed. Readers of our journal will learn more about that person in weeks and months following the publication of this, my last issue at the helm. Watch this space!

For my last editorial reflections, and before turning to introduce the papers in this issue, I wanted to share insights I gained from attending a Wiley editors’ workshop in London, fortuitously held the day before I left the UK after a month in the archives in September [thanks Simon!].

There, I learned a great deal that I think will shape publishing in general and in this journal in coming years—and I think the pace of change will only increase, requiring of us both the energy to seize opportunities and the nous to do so critically and creatively.

The full-day workshop was held on 18 September in a lovely four-storey building on the corner of Fitzroy Square, within “coo-ee” of University College London, which is enticingly embedded among the streets of Camden. Among the 100 or so in attendance were Wiley staff, editors from journals across the span of disciplines from humanities to physics and medical science, and consultants such as James Butcher—who has a long track record of academic publishing with Nature and a business and a fascinating blog, Journal·ology. It was also a little sobering to learn that Wiley works with around 50,000 editors whose tenures range from 1 to 50 years’ duration. Below, I refer to three of presentations because I think they are likely to be of most interest to this journal’s broad readership.

Allyn Molina, lead of the publishing development team, reminded us of the crucial importance of a vision for all journals and of the need to reflect that vision in journals’ statements of aims and scope. In coming weeks, our team will be looking hard at our own statements in light of that insight—again, there are seasons for such reflections and now is a great time for that work in our circle of influence. Allyn also spoke about how challenging publishing is, and her descriptions reminded me of the strong headwinds we face in the academy. Many perturbations are held in common—AI, market forces, or the need for vigilance in relation to ethics and proper conduct. Many of the qualities needed to deal with those headwinds also have parallels across our two entangled sectors. Among them are adaptability and flexibility, qualities that are decidedly different from tendencies to be undirected or unreflexive. There is also a need to be innovative while respecting longstanding traditions that aren’t simply bolted on but have a robust logic behind them.

Liz Ferguson, Senior VP, Research Publishing, then spoke about Wiley’s work to shape scholarly publishing. Responsible for 2000 journals, Liz focuses on transformational change in research and publishing infrastructures and on rapidly changing expectations of publishers from among authors, reviewers, editors, and readers. New technologies should allow for greater transparency, integrity, and simplicity of process but all that has to be road-tested. Editors and their teams are crucial collaborators in that work. Liz also referred to the well-publicised uptick in plagiarism and the abuse of publishing in paper mills. In that, AI is clearly both a blessing and a bane and Wiley staff are constantly asking how to use it in detection, but also in a vast array of work processes meant to complement and enhance human decision-making. She said that everyone is sharply cognisant of the need for stringent care in how Wiley engages with these developments.

Conversation then turned to peer review and Liz noted—as did we all—that it is increasingly challenging to secure reviewers, partly because of the volume of submissions and partly because of workloads and growing numbers of submissions from regions not part of the traditional authorship base. Wiley is apparently on target for receiving a million submissions a year and—with 300,000 journals in total in its “stable”—is seen as a relatively small publisher in comparative terms. Overall, there are reportedly 4.2 million papers submitted for review each year and Liz thought that AI is, and will be a significant force in how initial vetting processes and reviews are handled in the [near] future. As readers may appreciate, that conjecture was one of the more contentiously debated points made during the day.

James Butcher, whom I introduced above, then spoke about his journey from editor to international publishing consultant before turning to consider several questions. I confess that I was sufficiently rivetted that I wrote down almost every word on his slides—so please consider the next paragraph largely verbatim and credit him.

What do journals do? Filter, enhance, amplify. What makes a journal impactful? Leadership; convening power or a space for conversations that matter; vehicle for cross-pollination across disciplines; an early warning system for important advances for readers; capacity to enhance recognition and visibility; and a method to train the next generation.

What do authors and readers want? Authors want to be published and read by peers; have their message amplified to and by a wider research community; get career credit; have quick decisions—especially first decisions; have fair treatment; have research as part of their personal academic histories both registered and preserved; and be published in open access sources. Readers want to save time; get trustworthy content; have easy access to research; understand trends and topics in their field; and “stand on the shoulders of giants” by doing their own research. James also emphasised the point that open access models have shifted the balance from readers to authors, and argued that we forget the former at our peril. Writers write to be read, after all.

How do technologies support editors? Some do not! Peer review systems such as Clarivate, ejournal press, and editorial manager date from the 1990s and have reached their shelf-life. However, their replacements are so difficult to orchestrate that some operations—Frontiers and MDPI noteworthy among them—built their own bespoke systems and appeared to have no legacy challenges. Two other ventures, IOP Publisher and Morressier, have partnered to develop new submission and peer-review systems. Kotahi is another to watch, alongside the ChronosHub author interface. I confess all that was absolutely news to me, and it shows the crucial importance of continuous professional development for editors and their teams.

What about research integrity systems? According to James, new tools are being launched at pace, among them Proofig, Geppetto and SnapShot, and Dimensions Research Integrity—none of which I had heard of and all of which I am still trying to learn about. Clear Skies and Signals apparently detect paper mills. For me, the important point James made at that juncture in his talk is the need for editors to collaborate rather than compete in monitoring paper mill activity. In aid of such conduct, just launched is a new tool called Argos, which uses data from CrossRef’s retraction watch database to provide visibility on problematic papers, authors, journals, and publishers. It should soon provide journalists and research integrity sleuths access to such information, and James was confident that, shortly, there will be nowhere for unconscionable authors to hide, especially at point of submission.

After that slightly deflating part of the conversation, I was pleased that James asked what does your journal stand for? He suggested that all editorial teams should be able to articulate “we believe x, y, and z” and “we support those beliefs by a, b, and c”. I am confident that we do such work in our journal and that we can always do more and better.

Editors were also asked how will you make your journal impactful? As part of the ensuing conversation, we explored what impact might be: attracting high quality submissions; amplifying authors’ messages; encouraging well-crafted and compelling special sections or issues; leading editorial teams; and training the next generation (and here I made the comment that “next” is not default for “young” since many academics are in mid-life by the time they enter their early career stage, and we should remember that). For James, rightly I think, the upshot of all of the content he had shared required that journal teams find ways to attract those writers and readers; make sound decisions about content; engage in creative outreach; be constructively critical and innovative in how we respond to change of various kinds, technology not least among them; and be unfailingly trustworthy.

This issue leads with work that continues our special commentaries on COVID-19, the fallout from which includes a new variant and the challenges its poses. Specifically, Rosina Moreno and Esther Vayá (2024) have written a fascinating paper on an epicentre of the original pandemic, considering its geographical distribution and evolution in waves across Spain. [If readers are interested in viewing the backlog of papers, we assembled a first virtual issue in 2023 and will do so again in 2025. Check out the virtual issues section under “browse” on the journal homepage.]

Work by Michael-Shawn Fletcher et al. (2024) on reconciling 22,000 years of landscape openness in the Tasmanian “wilderness” is a fine, sweeping example of how geography can be applied not only across borders within the discipline but with others, such as archaeology. Of particular note is their sharp focus on how insights from science can and must inform efforts to decolonise knowledge and land use practices.

Their article is complemented by another about how we are Country and how Country mentors us, led by early career academic, Matilda Harry et al. (2024). They make an important call for relations between Country and First Nations young people to centre on research mentorship practice, policies, and program frameworks and I think there is much for us to learn from in this work and apply in our own.

In a challenging paper on the emotional geographies of roadkill and its cumulative effects on tourists’ experiences of Tasmania, Elleke Leurs et al. (2024) have found that “unplanned, sporadic, unexpected, and confronting encounters with dead animals detract from the tourism experience for most” and especially for women. They have also suggested the need for more research on these animal geographies on mainland Australia, and in Canada and South Africa, where roadkill is also problematic.

Douglas Bardsley and colleagues (2024) venture into the challenges of governing hydrosocial risk in peri-urban South Australia, a pronouncedly dry place and also a centre of viticulture. Focusing on that industry, the authors consider the range of challenges to instituting hydrosocial policies and practices and point to the crucial functions that collaboration, trust, and adaptation will have in such labours. Insights from their work are, I think, applicable to both other sectors and regions.

In recent issues, we have featured work on geography, pedagogy, and learning and teaching, and Jeana Kriewaldt and her colleagues (2024) add to that corpus in a paper comparing teachers’ beliefs and actions during collaborative geographical inquiry. Specifically, they have conducted fine-grain, filmed interactions of the micro-spatial elements of teacher–student interactions during geography inquiry-based learning—a double focus on classroom geographies and geography in the classroom I find immensely appealing [on which, to be briefly self-referential, see Stratford et al., 2022]. Of note, Kriewaldt and her colleagues have found that teachers’ guiding actions in certain locations in classrooms influenced the dynamics of inquiry and educational outcomes.

Two works from Indonesia and China complete the complement of papers in this issue. The first centres on migratory outcomes across localities and generations in Kupang, Indonesia. In it, Fandi Akhmad et al. (2024) have shown how entrepreneurial migration generated sufficient income for workers moving to Kupang to support daily living expenses, children’s education, and investments “back home.” However, migrants were also subjected to certain difficult vagaries that characterise the informal sector in particular. In such cases especially, but in all cases more generally, social networks, knowledge, and reciprocity were crucial for migrants to settle and succeed.

The second paper, by Yang Liu and Ming Luo (2024), is about the search of an imagined China among international students from Europe, North and South America, and Oceania seeking to study there. Students’ ideas about what China “is” vary significantly and motivate their migration decision-making in ways that could inform how their destination choices are shaped and could explain China’s changing status in international student migration trends.

Then, Guy Robinson (2024) has provided a comprehensive, appreciative reading of Peter Wohlleben’s 2023 book The power of trees: How ancient forests can save us if we let them. These kinds of book reviews have remained a part of the journal when many others have stopped providing them and I am so pleased we continue to support critical reflections on works longer than papers!

And finally, Ruth Fincher et al. (2024) have paid homage to the wonderful Janice Monk, Australian-American feminist geographer, who graced the discipline and austral, northern, and international geography organisations for more than five decades. A companion obituary has also been published in our sibling, Australian Geographer, and I commend that to you as well.

And that, as they say, is that … a wrap.

It has been my delight to serve this journal and its associated entities, networks, individuals, and groups over the last decade and I look forward to coming back in the new year in a new and supportive role.

Our collective intention is to continue to provide the highest quality journal of which we are capable, alongside a regular webinar, lectures at the IAG conferences, and Wiley prizes for highly commendable papers published each year.

Given the strong headwinds before us, I am certain that creative and critically constructive changes will characterise the journal’s vision, aims and scope, work, and appearance in coming years, and I think that such refreshing cycles are crucial for all those working on journal publishing in whatever guise.

With sincere best wishes to all and heartfelt thanks for the experience of a lifetime.

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