Predatory and Questionable Publishing Practices How to Recognize and Avoid Them
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| Publication date | 2024 |
| Number of pages | 22 |
| Publisher | UKB |
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| Abstract |
It is beneficial for scholars to publish in an authoritative, good-quality journal, book, or conference series produced by a reputable publisher in their research field. Yet there is growing concern about the increasing number of publishers and journals that conduct allegedly questionable publishing practices – e.g. low-quality peer review and/or aggressive acquisition – and the more fraudulent predatory publishers.Predatory publishers can harm scholars and their institutions financially and reputationally by charging a fee for no peer review or publishing service at all. Predatory publishers and questionable publishing practices have a negative effect on the credibility of the published scholarly record and the scholarly community as a whole.How can you recognise and avoid these practices and publishers? What if you have submitted an article to, or are in a publishing process with, a publisher and something goes wrong or seems inaccurate?
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| Document type | Book |
| Note | With supplement: Risk table. |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10688081 |
| Downloads |
Predatory_and_Questionable_Publishing_Practices_v1.0_2024-3
(Final published version)
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