I cannot be the only academic whose in-box is suddenly full of a new kind of invitation. I am urged to join the editorial board of an engineering journal in view of my 鈥渙utstanding contributions in this area鈥. I am similarly invited to sit on the editorial boards of journals dealing in subjects from intellectual property rights to branches of the sciences and philosophy. It is gratifying to know that one鈥檚 reputation is so extensive.
Other journals want me to send them an article now or, at the latest, by the end of this week. Those tend to come with tempting offers of waivers of the submission or article processing fee. Today I am urged to write (urgently) for a special issue on 鈥淗ow quantification can enhance life quality鈥. (Over the past week it was pharmacological and biomedical analysis, disease diagnosis, and chemical imaging.) My article may be 鈥減eer-reviewed鈥 by a member of a new-style editorial board.
I am also getting 鈥渆xclusive鈥 offers from a 鈥渏ournal鈥 promising to record citations of my publications.
This was surely all foreseeable in the rush to implement open access. Here is a new marketplace, and market forces are operating to create a racket. How can plain old-fashioned scholarship hope to protect its position?
G.R. Evans
Oxford
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