“Predatory publishing” refers to conditions under which gold open-access academic publishers claim to conduct peer review and charge for their publishing services but do not, in fact, actually perform such reviews. Most prominently exposed in recent years by Jeffrey Beall, the phenomenon garners much media attention. In this article, we acknowledge that such practices are deceptive but then examine, across a variety of stakeholder groups, what the harm is from such actions to each group of actors. We find that established publishers have a strong motivation to hype claims of predation as damaging to the scholarly and scientific endeavour while noting that, in fact, systems of peer review are themselves already acknowledged as deeply flawed
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...
This article discusses the phenomenon of predatory publishing and examines the benefits and limitati...
“Predatory publishing” refers to conditions under which gold open-access academic publishers claim t...
“Predatory publishing” refers to conditions under which gold open-access academic publishers claim t...
The rise of Open Access (OA) and its Gold business model – based on Article Process Charges (APC’s)...
Predatory publishers, characterised by unscholarly publishing practices, affect all authors and libr...
The word ‘predatory’ has become an obstacle to a serious discussion of publishing practices. Its use...
Predatory publishers—those that abuse the gold (author-pays) model of scholarly Open Access publishi...
Predatory open-access (OA) publishers—the ones that exploit the gold (author pays)publishing model f...
Predatory open-access (OA) publishers—the ones that exploit the gold (author pays)publishing model f...
The ‘predatory publishing’ label is often linked to open access in order to discredit it, evoking as...
Predatory publishers—those that abuse the gold (author-pays) model of scholarly Open Access publishi...
This article is a first-hand account of the author’s work identifying and listing predatory publishe...
This article examines the ways the gold open-access model is negatively affecting scholarly communic...
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...
This article discusses the phenomenon of predatory publishing and examines the benefits and limitati...
“Predatory publishing” refers to conditions under which gold open-access academic publishers claim t...
“Predatory publishing” refers to conditions under which gold open-access academic publishers claim t...
The rise of Open Access (OA) and its Gold business model – based on Article Process Charges (APC’s)...
Predatory publishers, characterised by unscholarly publishing practices, affect all authors and libr...
The word ‘predatory’ has become an obstacle to a serious discussion of publishing practices. Its use...
Predatory publishers—those that abuse the gold (author-pays) model of scholarly Open Access publishi...
Predatory open-access (OA) publishers—the ones that exploit the gold (author pays)publishing model f...
Predatory open-access (OA) publishers—the ones that exploit the gold (author pays)publishing model f...
The ‘predatory publishing’ label is often linked to open access in order to discredit it, evoking as...
Predatory publishers—those that abuse the gold (author-pays) model of scholarly Open Access publishi...
This article is a first-hand account of the author’s work identifying and listing predatory publishe...
This article examines the ways the gold open-access model is negatively affecting scholarly communic...
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...
This article discusses the phenomenon of predatory publishing and examines the benefits and limitati...