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Questionable publication practices

2.9 Ethics and journal publishing

2.9.2 Questionable publication practices

There are at least three publication practices which we believe should be regarded as questionable (if not unethical):

Unacceptable levels of publication intensity by the editor or a member of the editorial board (in the journal)

Unacceptable publication intensity by an individual in the journal (for example, publication of excessively large number of papers (more than 2 papers in the same issue)

‘Publication cartels’ where two or more individuals (sometimes also members of the editorial board) co-author repeatedly in the same journal.

Why not use the term ‘unethical practices’? In our view the term ‘unethical’ assumes some notion of

‘intent to defraud’ or ‘intent to break the rules’ which in turn presupposes some knowledge of the rules of the game. But we believe that there is not sufficient consensus in the field of scholarly publishing on all the ‘rules of appropriate publication behaviour’. There is still some degree of ambiguity surrounding these rules. This applies both to the rules or criteria of accreditation and Beall’s rules about predatory journals and publishing.

Case 1: Journal A

Journal A is a refereed journal published quarterly (March, June, September and December) by Publisher A. The editor-in-chief and the editorial committee serve as a review board in conjunction with appointed reviewers throughout Africa and overseas for special topics. The current editor-in-chief is ****** from the Department of ****** at ******. He recently succeeded ****** from the university of ******

as editor.

Figure 22 shows the number of papers published each year from 2005 to 2015.

.

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Figure 22:

Number of papers in Journal A by year*

The steep increase in the number of papers in Journal A since 2011 requires further investigation. A breakdown by address of the authors is presented in

Figure 23

.

Figure 23: Institutional affiliations of Journal A authors*

The breakdown by institutional affiliation gave a first indication of some questionable publication practices with 64% of all authorships produced by members of the editorial board (indicated in green in the figure) of the journal. The disaggregation by individual author (Table 22 below) presents an even more disturbing picture.

Table 22: Most prolific Journal A authors in descending order*

Author Papers Institution Share Cum %

********** 113 **** 3.3% 3.3%

********** 77 **** 2.2% 5.5%

23 42

94 36

76 66

155 192

246

298 327

0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015

1,8%0,2%1,1%0,2%

12,3%

2,2%2,0%

6,2%

0,4%

4,4%

0,9%

7,5%

2,3%

8,9%

2,5%

18,8%

10,1%

6,5%

2,5%

7,9%

0,8%0,5%

0,0%

2,0%

4,0%

6,0%

8,0%

10,0%

12,0%

14,0%

16,0%

18,0%

20,0%

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********** 58 **** 1.7% 7.1%

********** 58 **** 1.7% 8.8%

********** 57 **** 1.6% 10.4%

********** 50 **** 1.4% 11.9%

********** 42 **** 1.2% 13.1%

********** 41 **** 1.2% 14.3%

********** 41 **** 1.2% 15.4%

********** 38 **** 1.1% 16.5%

********** 37 **** 1.1% 17.6%

********** 30 **** 0.9% 18.5%

It is already of some concern that the previous editor in chief, ****** published 58 articles in the journal (the same applies to the current editor, ******). However, what is most striking is the publication profile of Prof ******, who is also a member of the editorial board

.

Figure 24: Publication profile of ******

It is not just the sheer volume of output in one journal that is striking, but even in the same issue. In October 2011, he published 11 out of 15 articles in one issue. We

believe that these are very clear examples of questionable publication practices.Case 2: Journal B*

19; 17%

6; 5%

25; 22%

19; 17%

15; 13%

6; 5%

11; 10% 2005

2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

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The Journal B* is an open access journal published by Publisher B in

******. It is one of

the journals that was flagged because of the anomalous increases in its published

articles over very short time frames, thereby raising a question about its capacity

to undertake rigorous and appropriate peer review. For example, the journal

content expanded exponentially between 2007 and 2011 from 243 pages in 2007

to a startling 13 579 pages in 2011. TR was asked in 2010 to review Journal B andfinally removed the journal from its list in February 2012, some 18 months after serious

questions regarding practices at the journal were submitted to the knowledge firm.

A total of 451 papers were published in the journal in recent years. These papers were produced by a total of 443 unique authors. The vast majority of authors produced only one or a fraction of a paper. A few authors produced larger numbers. Table 23 lists the authors (in descending order) who have published five or more papers in the journal.

Table 23: The most prolific authors who published in Journal B*

Surname Initial Number of

papers

***** ** 69

***** * 14

***** ** 9

***** ** 7

***** * 7

***** * 7

***** * 6

***** * 6

***** ** 6

***** * 5

***** ** 5

African Journal of Business Management 3 22 53 122 225 26 451

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***** ** 5

***** ** 5

***** ** 5

***** ** 5

***** * 5

***** ** 5

***** * 5

***** * 4

Two names stand out: ****** and ******. The former is the editor-in-chief of the journal. In 2011, he authored or co-authored 23 articles and in 2012 he contributed 41 papers to his own journal. It is believed that this is a clear case of a questionable publication practice.

Summary

The enormous pressure to publish and publish fast, preferably in the very best journals, influences both authors and editors. This pressure exists almost everywhere, but is particularly intense in Asia, especially in China and India. It is therefore no surprise that the most inventive ways to game the peer-review system to get manuscripts published have come from China and India. This situation is no less true in South Africa where we have for some time now seen the pervasive effects of the DHET-funding system in combination with the NRF-rating system.

The problem is the perverse incentive systems in scientific publishing. As long as authors are (mostly) rewarded for publishing many articles and editors are (mostly) rewarded for publishing them rapidly, new ways of gaming the traditional publication models will be invented more quickly than new control measures can be put in place.

We need to establish more timely alert systems to assist universities (and their research offices) to identify cases of clear predatory publishing before submitting for publication subsidies.

We need an ongoing analysis of SA publication practices to identify cases of questionable publication and again to alert the DHET and university research offices to such practices.

We need to run more workshops in basic bibliometrics (understanding the publication and

citation behaviour, the dangers of unethical and questionable practices in scientific authorship

and especially of predatory publishing) for all students and emerging scholars.

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It is imperative that we protect the integrity of our publication system and hence also of the funding

system. Growth in output must go hand in hand with proper quality and ethical ‘surveillance’.

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Part Three: Book publishing