International audienceThis article examines the evolution of peer review and the modern editorial processes of scholarly journals by analyzing a novel data set derived from the Royal Society's archives and covering 1865-1965, that is, the historical period in which refereeing (not yet known as peer review) became firmly established. Our analysis reveals how the Royal Society's editorial processes coped with both an increasing reliance on refereeing and a growth in submissions, while maintaining collective responsibility and minimizing research waste. By engaging more of its fellows in editorial activity, the society was able to establish an equilibrium of number of submissions per reviewer that was relatively stable over time. Nevertheless,...
The main goal of this paper is to construct journal peer review as a scientific object of study base...
Peer review is central to academic publishing. Yet for many it is a mysterious and contentious pract...
Many journals now rely on editorial management systems, which are supposed to support the administra...
International audienceThis article examines the evolution of peer review and the modern editorial pr...
This article examines the evolution of peer review and the modern editorial processes of scholarly j...
The research for this paper was funded by the Arts & Humanities Research Council, grant AH/K001841/1...
Despite being coined only in the early 1970s, ‘peer review’ has become a powerful rhetorical concept...
Ever since the Royal Society replaced the editor of the Philosophical Transactions with an editorial...
Ever since the Royal Society replaced the editor of the Philosophical Transactions with an editorial...
Scholarly journals provide a record of the research, issues, and concerns of a field. Authors have t...
Peer review is a central tenet in research across all disciplines. It is a key feature in monitoring...
There is a prevalent myth, even in scholarly literature, that peer review was born, fully formed, wi...
Journal peer review performed in the natural sciences has been an object of study since at least 183...
When the Royal Geographical Society was founded in 1830, its prospectus made a firm commitment to pr...
The main goal of this paper is to construct journal peer review as a scientific object of study base...
The main goal of this paper is to construct journal peer review as a scientific object of study base...
Peer review is central to academic publishing. Yet for many it is a mysterious and contentious pract...
Many journals now rely on editorial management systems, which are supposed to support the administra...
International audienceThis article examines the evolution of peer review and the modern editorial pr...
This article examines the evolution of peer review and the modern editorial processes of scholarly j...
The research for this paper was funded by the Arts & Humanities Research Council, grant AH/K001841/1...
Despite being coined only in the early 1970s, ‘peer review’ has become a powerful rhetorical concept...
Ever since the Royal Society replaced the editor of the Philosophical Transactions with an editorial...
Ever since the Royal Society replaced the editor of the Philosophical Transactions with an editorial...
Scholarly journals provide a record of the research, issues, and concerns of a field. Authors have t...
Peer review is a central tenet in research across all disciplines. It is a key feature in monitoring...
There is a prevalent myth, even in scholarly literature, that peer review was born, fully formed, wi...
Journal peer review performed in the natural sciences has been an object of study since at least 183...
When the Royal Geographical Society was founded in 1830, its prospectus made a firm commitment to pr...
The main goal of this paper is to construct journal peer review as a scientific object of study base...
The main goal of this paper is to construct journal peer review as a scientific object of study base...
Peer review is central to academic publishing. Yet for many it is a mysterious and contentious pract...
Many journals now rely on editorial management systems, which are supposed to support the administra...