Background. Scholarly communication is an ever-evolving practice. As publishing advanced from the printed format to digital formats, new trends, practices and platforms emerged in academia. As reputable publishers adapted their business models to accommodate open access, many non-reputable publishers have emerged with questionable business models and less-than favourable or unacceptable publishing services. Objectives. This paper discusses changing trends in scholarly publishing, the advent of and problems caused by pervasive predatory publishing practices, and possible solutions. The paper also investigates possible alternatives to Beall’s list and whether a “one-stop shop” black- or white list would serve as a comprehensive tool for schol...
Librarians have a key role to play in educating users about predatory publishing. Predatory publishi...
Librarians have a key role to play in educating users about predatory publishing. Predatory publishi...
This chapter presents a three-phase analysis of 521 journals that use the open source publishing pla...
The word ‘predatory’ has become an obstacle to a serious discussion of publishing practices. Its use...
This article discusses the phenomenon of predatory publishing and examines the benefits and limitati...
This article discusses the phenomenon of predatory publishing and examines the benefits and limitati...
The substandard, low quality or predatory journals are the real threat to the publishing industry. I...
Predatory publishing is currently a critical problem for researchers, particularly with the continuo...
This article discusses the phenomenon of predatory publishing and examines the benefits and limitati...
Predatory publishers—those that abuse the gold (author-pays) model of scholarly Open Access publishi...
Predatory publishers, characterised by unscholarly publishing practices, affect all authors and libr...
This paper aims to address the issue of predatory publishing, sensu lato. To achieve this, we offer ...
Predatory publishers—those that abuse the gold (author-pays) model of scholarly Open Access publishi...
“Predatory publishing” refers to conditions under which gold open-access academic publishers claim t...
This article is a first-hand account of the author’s work identifying and listing predatory publishe...
Librarians have a key role to play in educating users about predatory publishing. Predatory publishi...
Librarians have a key role to play in educating users about predatory publishing. Predatory publishi...
This chapter presents a three-phase analysis of 521 journals that use the open source publishing pla...
The word ‘predatory’ has become an obstacle to a serious discussion of publishing practices. Its use...
This article discusses the phenomenon of predatory publishing and examines the benefits and limitati...
This article discusses the phenomenon of predatory publishing and examines the benefits and limitati...
The substandard, low quality or predatory journals are the real threat to the publishing industry. I...
Predatory publishing is currently a critical problem for researchers, particularly with the continuo...
This article discusses the phenomenon of predatory publishing and examines the benefits and limitati...
Predatory publishers—those that abuse the gold (author-pays) model of scholarly Open Access publishi...
Predatory publishers, characterised by unscholarly publishing practices, affect all authors and libr...
This paper aims to address the issue of predatory publishing, sensu lato. To achieve this, we offer ...
Predatory publishers—those that abuse the gold (author-pays) model of scholarly Open Access publishi...
“Predatory publishing” refers to conditions under which gold open-access academic publishers claim t...
This article is a first-hand account of the author’s work identifying and listing predatory publishe...
Librarians have a key role to play in educating users about predatory publishing. Predatory publishi...
Librarians have a key role to play in educating users about predatory publishing. Predatory publishi...
This chapter presents a three-phase analysis of 521 journals that use the open source publishing pla...