Never mind predatory publishers… what about ‘grey’ publishers?

Author:

Nicholas David1ORCID,Herman Eti1ORCID,Abrizah Abdullah2ORCID,Rodríguez-Bravo Blanca3ORCID,Boukacem-Zeghmouri Cherifa4ORCID,Watkinson Anthony1ORCID,Świgoń Marzena5,Xu Jie6ORCID,Jamali Hamid R.7ORCID,Tenopir Carol8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CIBER Research Ltd, United Kingdom

2. University of Malaya, Malaysia

3. Universidad de León, Spain

4. Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, France

5. Uniwersytet Warminsko-Mazurski, Poland

6. Wuhan University, China

7. Charles Sturt University, Australia

8. University of Tennessee, USA

Abstract

The Harbingers project, which studied the working lives and scholarly communication behaviour of early career researchers (ECRs) over 6 years, found evidence of changing attitudes to questionable (grey) publishing. Thus, whilst predatory publishers have come to be treated with equanimity, as a problem easily dealt with, there was growing concern with the high volume of low-grade research being generated, some of which by ‘grey’ open access publishers for want of a better name (questionable and non-standard have also been used). With the recent announcement (2023) that the government of Malaysia (a Harbinger case country) is not providing Article Processing Charges (APCs) for articles published by MDPI, Frontiers and Hindawi on quality and cost grounds, we set out to see what lay behind this decision and whether other countries exhibited similar concerns. Information was obtained by asking Harbinger country leads, mostly embedded in research universities, from Australia, China, France, Israel, Malaysia, Poland, Spain, UK, and the US to conduct desk research to establish what is happening. It was found that countries, like ECRs, appear to have formed into two different camps, with China, Poland, France, and Spain joining Malaysia in the camp of those who felt concerned about these publishers and the UK, US, Israel, and Australia belonging to the camp of the unconcerned. Explanations for the split are furnished and whether the Malaysian position will prevail elsewhere is considered. Finally, in this paper, we have aired issues/concerns, rather than provided robust, systematic data. For a systematic study we shall have to wait for the fuller study we are hoping to conduct.

Publisher

Ediciones Profesionales de la Informacion SL

Subject

Library and Information Sciences,Information Systems,Communication,General Medicine

Reference33 articles.

1. Alecci, Scilla (2018). New international investigation tackles ‘fake science’ and its poisonous effects. Blog post, 20 July. https://www.icij.org/blog/2018/07/new-international-investigation-tackles-fake-science-and-its-poisonous-effects

2. Alrawadieh, Zaid (2018). “Publishing in predatory tourism and hospitality journals: Mapping the academic market and identifying response strategies”. Tourism and hospitality research, v. 20, n. 1, pp. 72-81

3. Aneca (2021). Bibliometric analysis and impact of open-access publishers in Spain. https://shorturl.at/kpyH4

4. Bagues, Manuel F.; Sylos-Labini, Mauro; Zinovyeva, Natalia (2017). A walk on the wild side: An investigation into the quantity and quality of ‘predatory’ publications in Italian academia (N. 2017/01). LEM working paper series. http://hdl.handle.net/10419/174551

5. Brockington, Dan (2022). MDPI Journals: 2015-2021. Blog post, Nov. 10. https://danbrockington.com/blog

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